功能保守的人类lncRNA基序GULF降低肥胖小鼠的葡萄糖和脂质水平。

Zhe Li,Sunmi Seok,Chengfei Jiang,Ping Li,Yonghe Ma,Hang Sun,Haiming Cao
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摘要

越来越多的证据表明人类长链非编码rna (lncRNAs)与代谢性疾病的发病机制有关,但fda尚未批准针对人类lncRNAs的药物。大多数人类lncrna在其他哺乳动物中缺乏保守性,这使得确定其作用和确定治疗靶点的工作变得复杂。在这里,我们利用功能保守lncrna (FCLs)的概念-尽管没有序列相似性,但具有共享功能的lncrna -开发了一个框架,用于识别人类lncrna作为代谢紊乱的治疗靶点。我们使用表达数量性状位点定位和功能保守分析来确定受疾病相关snp影响的人类lncrna和具有潜在功能保守的小鼠等价物。我们鉴定了人类和小鼠GULLs(降糖降脂),它们通过结合CRTC2调节糖脂代谢,从而通过CREB调节糖异生基因,通过SREBP1调节脂生基因。尽管它们缺乏序列相似性,但两种lncrna在肥胖小鼠中表现出相似的代谢作用,长期激活的益处更为明显。为了确定可药物位点,我们将GULLs的结合基序映射到CRTC2(称为GULFs)。独立的人类GULF是一种类似于fda批准的sirna的RNA低聚物,可显著改善肥胖小鼠的葡萄糖和脂质水平。该框架强调了功能保守的人类lncrna作为有希望的治疗靶点,例如GULLs作为降血糖和降脂治疗药物的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The functionally conserved human lncRNA motif GULF lowers glucose and lipid levels in obese mice.
Growing evidence links human long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) to metabolic disease pathogenesis, yet no FDA-approved drugs target human lncRNAs. Most human lncRNAs lack conservation in other mammals, complicating efforts to define their roles and identify therapeutic targets. Here, we leveraged the concept of functionally conserved lncRNAs (FCLs) - lncRNAs that share function despite no sequence similarity - to develop a framework for identifying human lncRNAs as therapeutic targets for metabolic disorders. We used expression quantitative trait loci mapping and functional conservation analyses to pinpoint human lncRNAs influenced by disease-associated SNPs and with potential functionally conserved mouse equivalents. We identified human and mouse GULLs (glucose and lipid lowering), which regulate glucose and lipid metabolism by binding CRTC2, thereby modulating gluconeogenic genes via CREB and lipogenic genes via SREBP1. Despite their lack of sequence similarity, both lncRNAs demonstrated similar metabolic effects in obese mice, with more pronounced benefits from long-term activation. To identify druggable sites, we mapped GULLs' binding motifs to CRTC2 (termed GULFs). Standalone human GULF, an RNA oligomer resembling FDA-approved siRNAs, significantly improved glucose and lipid levels in obese mice. This framework highlights functionally conserved human lncRNAs as promising therapeutic targets, exemplified by GULLs' potential as a glucose- and lipid-lowering therapeutic.
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