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Post-Transcriptional Dynamics is Involved in Rapid Adaptation to Hypergravity in Jurkat T Cells

Vahlensieck, Christian; Thiel, Cora Sandra; Pöschl, Daniel; Bradley, Timothy; Krammer, Sonja; Lauber, Beatrice; Polzer, Jennifer; Ullrich, Oliver (2022). Post-Transcriptional Dynamics is Involved in Rapid Adaptation to Hypergravity in Jurkat T Cells. Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, 10:933984.

Abstract

The transcriptome of human immune cells rapidly reacts to altered gravity in a highly dynamic way. We could show in previous experiments that transcriptional patterns show profound adaption after seconds to minutes of altered gravity. To gain further insight into these transcriptional alteration and adaption dynamics, we conducted a highly standardized RNA-Seq experiment with human Jurkat T cells exposed to 9xg hypergravity for 3 and 15 min, respectively. We investigated the frequency with which individual exons were used during transcription and discovered that differential exon usage broadly appeared after 3 min and became less pronounced after 15 min. Additionally, we observed a shift in the transcript pool from coding towards non-coding transcripts. Thus, adaption of gravity-sensitive differentially expressed genes followed a dynamic transcriptional rebound effect. The general dynamics were compatible with previous studies on the transcriptional effects of short hypergravity on human immune cells and suggest that initial up-regulatory changes mostly result from increased elongation rates. The shift correlated with a general downregulation of the affected genes. All chromosome bands carried homogenous numbers of gravity-sensitive genes but showed a specific tendency towards up- or downregulation. Altered gravity affected transcriptional regulation throughout the entire genome, whereby the direction of differential expression was strongly dependent on the structural location in the genome. A correlation analysis with potential mediators of the early transcriptional response identified a link between initially upregulated genes with certain transcription factors. Based on these findings, we have been able to further develop our model of the transcriptional response to altered gravity.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Institute of Anatomy
04 Faculty of Medicine > Zurich Center for Integrative Human Physiology (ZIHP)
Dewey Decimal Classification:570 Life sciences; biology
610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Life Sciences > Developmental Biology
Life Sciences > Cell Biology
Uncontrolled Keywords:altered gravity, gene expression, gravity-sensing, hypergravity, immune cells, space flight
Language:English
Date:4 July 2022
Deposited On:17 Aug 2022 07:52
Last Modified:19 Mar 2025 04:33
Publisher:Frontiers Research Foundation
ISSN:2296-634X
OA Status:Gold
Free access at:PubMed ID. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.933984
PubMed ID:35859900
Project Information:
  • Funder: Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes
  • Grant ID:
  • Project Title:
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  • Language: English
  • Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

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