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result(s) for
"Neuregulin-1 - genetics"
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Support for involvement of neuregulin 1 in schizophrenia pathophysiology
by
Middleton, F A
,
Petryshen, T L
,
McGann, L
in
Behavioral Sciences
,
Biological Psychology
,
Chromosome 8
2005
Schizophrenia is a common, multigenic psychiatric disorder. Linkage studies, including a recent meta-analysis of genome scans, have repeatedly implicated chromosome 8p12-p23.1 in schizophrenia susceptibility. More recently, significant association with a candidate gene on 8p12, neuregulin 1 (
NRG1
), has been reported in several European and Chinese samples. We investigated
NRG1
for association in schizophrenia patients of Portuguese descent to determine whether this gene is a risk factor in this population. We tested
NRG1
markers and haplotypes for association in 111 parent-proband trios, 321 unrelated cases, and 242 control individuals. Associations were found with a haplotype that overlaps the risk haplotype originally reported in the Icelandic population (‘Hap
ICE
’), and two haplotypes located in the 3′ end of
NRG1
(all
P
<0.05). However, association was not detected with Hap
ICE
itself. Comparison of NRG1 transcript expression in peripheral leukocytes from schizophrenia patients and unaffected siblings identified 3.8-fold higher levels of the SMDF variant in patients (
P=
0.039). Significant positive correlations (
P
<0.001) were found between SMDF and HRG-beta 2 expression and between HRG-gamma and ndf43 expression, suggesting common transcriptional regulation of NRG1 variants. In summary, our results suggest that haplotypes across
NRG1
and multiple NRG1 variants are involved in schizophrenia.
Journal Article
Pathogen effector recognition-dependent association of NRG1 with EDS1 and SAG101 in TNL receptor immunity
2021
Plants utilise intracellular nucleotide-binding, leucine-rich repeat (NLR) immune receptors to detect pathogen effectors and activate local and systemic defence. NRG1 and ADR1 “helper” NLRs (RNLs) cooperate with enhanced disease susceptibility 1 (EDS1), senescence-associated gene 101 (SAG101) and phytoalexin-deficient 4 (PAD4) lipase-like proteins to mediate signalling from TIR domain NLR receptors (TNLs). The mechanism of RNL/EDS1 family protein cooperation is not understood. Here, we present genetic and molecular evidence for exclusive EDS1/SAG101/NRG1 and EDS1/PAD4/ADR1 co-functions in TNL immunity. Using immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry, we show effector recognition-dependent interaction of NRG1 with EDS1 and SAG101, but not PAD4. An EDS1-SAG101 complex interacts with NRG1, and EDS1-PAD4 with ADR1, in an immune-activated state. NRG1 requires an intact nucleotide-binding P-loop motif, and EDS1 a functional EP domain and its partner SAG101, for induced association and immunity. Thus, two distinct modules (NRG1/EDS1/SAG101 and ADR1/EDS1/PAD4) mediate TNL receptor defence signalling.
For defence, plants deploy nucleotide binding, leucine-rich repeat (NLR) immune receptors to detect pathogens that signal via modular networks of downstream proteins. Here the authors report rapid induced association of non-interchangeable signalling pathway module components after NLR activation.
Journal Article
NRG1 functions downstream of EDS1 to regulate TIR-NLR-mediated plant immunity in Nicotiana benthamiana
by
Qi, Tiancong
,
Cho, Myeong-Je
,
Kim, Joonyoung Ryan
in
B-Lymphocyte Subsets - metabolism
,
Biological Sciences
,
Disease resistance
2018
Effector-triggered immunity (ETI) in plants involves a large family of nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) immune receptors, including Toll/IL-1 receptor-NLRs (TNLs) and coiled-coil NLRs (CNLs). Although various NLR immune receptors are known, a mechanistic understanding of NLR function in ETI remains unclear. The TNL Recognition of XopQ 1 (Roq1) recognizes the effectors XopQ and HopQ1 from Xanthomonas and Pseudomonas, respectively, which activates resistance to Xanthomonas euvesicatoria and Xanthomonas gardneri in an Enhanced Disease Susceptibility 1 (EDS1)-dependent way in Nicotiana benthamiana. In this study, we found that the N. benthamiana N requirement gene 1 (NRG1), a CNL protein required for the tobacco TNL protein N-mediated resistance to tobacco mosaic virus, is also essential for immune signaling [including hypersensitive response (HR)] triggered by the TNLs Roq1 and Recognition of Peronospora parasitica 1 (RPP1), but not by the CNLs Bs2 and Rps2, suggesting that NRG1may be a conserved key component in TNL signaling pathways. Besides EDS1, Roq1 and NRG1 are necessary for resistance to Xanthomonas and Pseudomonas in N. benthamiana. NRG1 functions downstream of Roq1 and EDS1 and physically associates with EDS1 in mediating XopQ-Roq1–triggered immunity. Moreover, RNA sequencing analysis showed that XopQ-triggered gene-expression profile changes in N. benthamiana were almost entirely mediated by Roq1 and EDS1 and were largely regulated by NRG1. Overall, our study demonstrates that NRG1 is a key component that acts downstream of EDS1 to mediate various TNL signaling pathways, including Roq1 and RPP1-mediated HR, resistance to Xanthomonas and Pseudomonas, and XopQ-regulated transcriptional changes in N. benthamiana.
Journal Article
Efficacy of Zenocutuzumab in NRG1 Fusion–Positive Cancer
2025
A basket study evaluated the efficacy of zenocutuzumab, a bispecific antibody against HER2 and HER3, in patients with solid tumors harboring
NRG1
fusions. Among 158 patients, 30% had a response (including 42% with pancreatic cancer).
Journal Article
Dual origin of enteric neurons in vagal Schwann cell precursors and the sympathetic neural crest
by
Brunet, Jean-François
,
Espinosa-Medina, Isabel
,
Jevans, Ben
in
Animals
,
Biological Sciences
,
Brain
2017
Most of the enteric nervous system derives from the “vagal” neural crest, lying at the level of somites 1–7, which invades the digestive tract rostro-caudally from the foregut to the hindgut. Little is known about the initial phase of this colonization, which brings enteric precursors into the foregut. Here we show that the “vagal crest” subsumes two populations of enteric precursors with contrasted origins, initial modes of migration, and destinations. Crest cells adjacent to somites 1 and 2 produce Schwann cell precursors that colonize the vagus nerve, which in turn guides them into the esophagus and stomach. Crest cells adjacent to somites 3–7 belong to the crest streams contributing to sympathetic chains: they migrate ventrally, seed the sympathetic chains, and colonize the entire digestive tract thence. Accordingly, enteric ganglia, like sympathetic ones, are atrophic when deprived of signaling through the tyrosine kinase receptor ErbB3, while half of the esophageal ganglia require, like parasympathetic ones, the nerve-associated form of the ErbB3 ligand, Neuregulin-1. These dependencies might bear relevance to Hirschsprung disease, with which alleles of Neuregulin-1 are associated.
Journal Article
CGMega: explainable graph neural network framework with attention mechanisms for cancer gene module dissection
2024
Cancer is rarely the straightforward consequence of an abnormality in a single gene, but rather reflects a complex interplay of many genes, represented as gene modules. Here, we leverage the recent advances of model-agnostic interpretation approach and develop CGMega, an explainable and graph attention-based deep learning framework to perform cancer gene module dissection. CGMega outperforms current approaches in cancer gene prediction, and it provides a promising approach to integrate multi-omics information. We apply CGMega to breast cancer cell line and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients, and we uncover the high-order gene module formed by ErbB family and tumor factors
NRG1
,
PPM1A
and
DLG2
. We identify 396 candidate AML genes, and observe the enrichment of either known AML genes or candidate AML genes in a single gene module. We also identify patient-specific AML genes and associated gene modules. Together, these results indicate that CGMega can be used to dissect cancer gene modules, and provide high-order mechanistic insights into cancer development and heterogeneity.
Gene modules are widespread and important for studying cancer. Here, authors propose an explainable deep learning-based framework, CGMega, which incorporates multi-omics information from the three-dimensional genome, epigenome, and protein-protein interactions to dissect cancer gene modules.
Journal Article
A Critical Period for Social Experience—Dependent Oligodendrocyte Maturation and Myelination
2012
Early social isolation results in adult behavioral and cognitive dysfunction that correlates with white matter alterations. However, how social deprivation influences myelination and the significance of these myelin defects in the adult remained undefined. We show that mice isolated for 2 weeks immediately after weaning have alterations in prefrontal cortex function and myelination that do not recover with reintroduction into a social environment. These alterations, which occur only during this critical period, are phenocopied by loss of oligodendrocyte ErbB3 receptors, and social isolation leads to reduced expression of the ErbB3 ligand neuregulin-1. These findings indicate that social experience regulates prefrontal cortex myelination through neuregulin-1/ErbB3 signaling and that this is essential for normal cognitive function, thus providing a cellular and molecular context to understand the consequences of social isolation.
Journal Article
Control of cardiac jelly dynamics by NOTCH1 and NRG1 defines the building plan for trabeculation
2018
In vertebrate hearts, the ventricular trabecular myocardium develops as a sponge-like network of cardiomyocytes that is critical for contraction and conduction, ventricular septation, papillary muscle formation and wall thickening through the process of compaction
1
. Defective trabeculation leads to embryonic lethality
2
–
4
or non-compaction cardiomyopathy (NCC)
5
. There are divergent views on when and how trabeculation is initiated in different species. In zebrafish, trabecular cardiomyocytes extrude from compact myocardium
6
, whereas in chicks, chamber wall thickening occurs before overt trabeculation
7
. In mice, the onset of trabeculation has not been described, but is proposed to begin at embryonic day 9.0, when cardiomyocytes form radially oriented ribs
2
. Endocardium–myocardium communication is essential for trabeculation, and numerous signalling pathways have been identified, including Notch
2
,
8
and Neuregulin (NRG)
4
. Late disruption of the Notch pathway causes NCC
5
. Whereas it has been shown that mutations in the extracellular matrix (ECM) genes
Has2
and
Vcan
prevent the formation of trabeculae in mice
9
,
10
and the matrix metalloprotease ADAMTS1 promotes trabecular termination
3
, the pathways involved in ECM dynamics and the molecular regulation of trabeculation during its early phases remain unexplored. Here we present a model of trabeculation in mice that integrates dynamic endocardial and myocardial cell behaviours and ECM remodelling, and reveal new epistatic relationships between the involved signalling pathways. NOTCH1 signalling promotes ECM degradation during the formation of endocardial projections that are critical for individualization of trabecular units, whereas NRG1 promotes myocardial ECM synthesis, which is necessary for trabecular rearrangement and growth. These systems interconnect through NRG1 control of
Vegfa
, but act antagonistically to establish trabecular architecture. These insights enabled the prediction of persistent ECM and cardiomyocyte growth in a mouse NCC model, providing new insights into the pathophysiology of congenital heart disease.
A new model of cardiac trabeculation in mice is presented in which NOTCH1 and NRG1 have opposing roles in extracellular matrix degradation and synthesis that are essential for defining trabecular architecture.
Journal Article
NRG1/ErbB signalling controls the dialogue between macrophages and neural crest-derived cells during zebrafish fin regeneration
2021
Fish species, such as zebrafish (
Danio rerio
), can regenerate their appendages after amputation through the formation of a heterogeneous cellular structure named blastema. Here, by combining live imaging of triple transgenic zebrafish embryos and single-cell RNA sequencing we established a detailed cell atlas of the regenerating caudal fin in zebrafish larvae. We confirmed the presence of macrophage subsets that govern zebrafish fin regeneration, and identified a
foxd3
-positive cell population within the regenerating fin. Genetic depletion of these
foxd3
-positive neural crest-derived cells (NCdC) showed that they are involved in blastema formation and caudal fin regeneration. Finally, chemical inhibition and transcriptomic analysis demonstrated that these
foxd3
-positive cells regulate macrophage recruitment and polarization through the NRG1/ErbB pathway. Here, we show the diversity of the cells required for blastema formation, identify a discrete
foxd3
-positive NCdC population, and reveal the critical function of the NRG1/ErbB pathway in controlling the dialogue between macrophages and NCdC.
Some fish can regenerate appendages by formation of a structure called the blastema. Here, the authors use single-cell RNA sequencing to characterize the cells required for blastema formation and fin regeneration and identified neural crest cells that orchestrate regeneration via the NRG1/ErbB axis
Journal Article