| Literature DB >> 28893190 |
Amy Tsurumi1,2,3, Connie Zhao4, Willis X Li5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Janus kinase-signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway has been well-characterized as a crucial signal transduction cascade that regulates vital biological responses including development, immunity and oncogenesis. Additionally to its canonical pathway that uses the phosphorylated form of the STAT transcription factor, recently the non-canonical pathway involving heterochromatin formation by unphosphorylated STAT was recently uncovered. Considering the significant role of the JAK/STAT pathway, we used the simple Drosophila system in which the non-canonical pathway was initially characterized, to compare putative canonical versus non-canonical transcriptional targets across the genome. We analyzed microarray expression patterns of wildtype, Jak gain- and loss-of-function mutants, as well as the Stat loss-of-function mutant during embryogenesis, since the contribution of the canonical signal transduction pathway has been well-characterized in these contexts. Previous studies have also demonstrated that Jak gain-of-function and Stat mutants counter heterochromatin silencing to de-repress target genes by the non-canonical pathway.Entities:
Keywords: Development; Drosophila; Epigenetics; Heterochromatin; JAK; Non-canonical JAK/STAT signaling; STAT; Signal transduction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28893190 PMCID: PMC5594485 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4058-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Hierarchical clustering of Jak gain-of-function and Stat loss-of-function mutants show separation by gene and stage of the embryo. (a) Differentially regulated genes were clustered by Pearson’s correlation complete distance separation. (b) Overlaps between Stat92E and Stat92E embryos were determined and suggest that a large number of genes are regulated stage-specifically
Fig. 2Biologically relevant overlapping probe sets of putative canonical and non-canonical transcriptional targets inferred by microarray. Significant genes were assessed for overlaps among the Jak-Stat mutants previously determined to be relevant for the canonical versus non-canonical heterochromatin-mediated silencing mechanism [19, 26] for (a) embryo samples and (b) maternal null and embryo samples
Fig. 3Non-canonical target sites have significantly more overlaps with heterochromatin sites. For both embryonic and maternal transcripts, overlaps between genomic loci corresponding to the probe set annotation and HP1a, Su(var)3–9 and/or H3K9me3 enriched loci listed in the relevant modENCODE database were tabulated. Probe sets annotated as transposable elements were also considered as heterochromatin sites. Non-canonical target probe sets had significantly higher proportion of such heterochromatin-related sites compared to canonical targets (p = 0.004, Fisher’s exact two-tailed test)
Fig. 4Canonical transcriptional targets are generally enriched with biological processes relevant to development and innate immunity, whereas non-canonical transcriptional targets appear to be involved with metabolism. (a) Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment of Biological Processes terms was assed using DAVID and the 20 highest fold enrichment GO terms and (b) all hits of KEGG pathway enrichment terms are shown for the canonical versus non-canonical target probe sets, in order of fold enrichment