Publications by authors named "Richard Myers"

Transposable Elements (TEs) are implicated in aging and neurodegenerative disorders, but the impact of brain TE RNA dynamics on these phenomena is not fully understood. Therefore, we quantified TE RNA changes in aging post-mortem human and mouse brains and in the neurodegenerative disorders Huntington's Disease (HD) and Parkinson's Disease (PD). We tracked TE small RNAs (smRNAs) expression landscape to assess the relationship to the active processing from TE long RNAs (lnRNAs).

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Transcription factors (TFs) regulate gene expression by facilitating or disrupting the formation of transcription initiation machinery at particular genomic loci. Because TF occupancy is driven in part by recognition of DNA sequence, genetic variation can influence TF-DNA associations and gene regulation. To identify variants that impact TF binding in human brain tissues, we assessed allele-specific binding (ASB) at heterozygous variants for 94 TFs in nine brain regions from two donors.

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  • Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by a CAG repeat expansion and is part of a group of disorders linked to unstable short tandem repeats, highlighting the complexity of genetic influences on the disease.
  • Research indicates that both overlapping and unique genetic modifiers affect clinical symptoms and somatic expansion in blood DNA, pointing to specific cell-type interactions in mismatch repair processes.
  • The study identifies a 5'-UTR variant that causes somatic expansion without altering clinical HD, and a specific sequence change that accelerates motor symptom onset without increasing expansion, emphasizing potential therapeutic targets for managing HD.
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  • Transcription factors (TFs) are crucial for brain function and gene expression, but detailed binding information in human brain tissue is limited.
  • Researchers created a comprehensive resource, called BrainTF, using multiple methods (like ChIP-seq and RNA-seq) to map the binding sites of over 100 TFs in various postmortem brain regions.
  • The study found that certain neuronal TFs, such as SATB2 and TBR1, target unique regions important for gene expression and are linked to risk variants associated with neuropsychiatric disorders.
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Epithelial cells secrete chloride to regulate water release at mucosal barriers, supporting both homeostatic hydration and the "weep" response that is critical for type 2 immune defense against parasitic worms (helminths). Epithelial tuft cells in the small intestine sense helminths and release cytokines and lipids to activate type 2 immune cells, but whether they regulate epithelial secretion is unknown. Here, we found that tuft cell activation rapidly induced epithelial chloride secretion in the small intestine.

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Differential gene expression in response to perturbations is mediated at least in part by changes in binding of transcription factors (TFs) and other proteins at specific genomic regions. Association of these -regulatory elements (CREs) with their target genes is a challenging task that is essential to address many biological and mechanistic questions. Many current approaches rely on chromatin conformation capture techniques or single-cell correlational methods to establish CRE-to-gene associations.

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  • Research is exploring whether neurodegenerative diseases caused by similar protein misfolding share genetic risk factors, but traditional studies lack the power to conclusively determine this.
  • By selecting patients based on their specific protein aggregation rather than just their clinical diagnosis, researchers can better identify genetic variants associated with diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
  • The study finds that genetic modifiers related to alpha-synuclein and beta-amyloid contribute to shared risk factors in neurodegenerative diseases, indicating common underlying mechanisms across different conditions.
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Background: In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the activation of T and B cell clones specific for self-antigens leads to the chronic inflammation of the synovium. Here, we perform an in-depth quantitative analysis of the seven chains that comprise the adaptive immune receptor repertoire (AIRR) in RA.

Results: In comparison to controls, we show that RA patients have multiple and strong differences in the B cell receptor repertoire including reduced diversity as well as altered isotype, chain, and segment frequencies.

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Bipolar disorder (BD) is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. While the largest published genome-wide association study identified 64 BD risk loci, the causal SNPs and genes within these loci remain unknown. We applied a suite of statistical and functional fine-mapping methods to these loci, and prioritized 17 likely causal SNPs for BD.

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Under International Health Regulations from 2005, a human infection caused by a novel influenza A virus variant is considered an event that has potential for high public health impact and is immediately notifiable to the World Health Organisation. We here describe the clinical, epidemiological and virological features of a confirmed human case of swine influenza A(H1N2)v in England detected through community respiratory virus surveillance. Swabbing and contact tracing helped refine public health risk assessment, following this unusual and unexpected finding.

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Tauopathies are a group of neurodegenerative diseases defined by abnormal aggregates of tau, a microtubule-associated protein encoded by MAPT. MAPT expression is near absent in neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and increases during differentiation. This temporally dynamic expression pattern suggests that MAPT expression could be controlled by transcription factors and cis-regulatory elements specific to differentiated cell types.

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The enteric nervous system (ENS) is an extensive network of neurons and glia within the wall of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract that regulates many essential GI functions. Consequently, disorders of the ENS due to developmental defects, inflammation, infection, or age-associated neurodegeneration lead to serious neurointestinal diseases. Despite the prevalence and severity of these diseases, effective treatments are lacking as they fail to directly address the underlying pathology.

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Historically, mpox has been characterized as an endemic zoonotic disease that transmits through contact with the reservoir rodent host in West and Central Africa. However, in May 2022, human cases of mpox were detected spreading internationally beyond countries with known endemic reservoirs. When the first cases from 2022 were sequenced, they shared 42 nucleotide differences from the closest mpox virus (MPXV) previously sampled.

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Transcription Factors (TFs) influence gene expression by facilitating or disrupting the formation of transcription initiation machinery at particular genomic loci. Because genomic localization of TFs is in part driven by TF recognition of DNA sequence, variation in TF binding sites can disrupt TF-DNA associations and affect gene regulation. To identify variants that impact TF binding in human brain tissues, we quantified allele bias for 93 TFs analyzed with ChIP-seq experiments of multiple structural brain regions from two donors.

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Article Synopsis
  • Transcription factors (TFs) are proteins that bind to DNA regulatory elements to regulate gene expression; the study focused on 680 DNA-associated proteins in the HepG2 cancer cell line.
  • Researchers modeled the impact of these TFs on gene expression, identifying 26 potential transcriptional repressors and analyzing high occupancy target sites in the context of genome organization.
  • The findings revealed closed chromatin regions with multiple TFs bound and highlighted a pair of TFs (MAFF/MAFK) linked to transcriptional repression, offering new insights into gene regulation in HepG2 cells.
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Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) information has played a crucial role in the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic by providing evidence about variants to inform public health policy. The purpose of this study was to assess the representativeness of sequenced cases compared with all COVID-19 cases in England, between March 2020 and August 2021, by demographic and socio-economic characteristics, to evaluate the representativeness and utility of these data in epidemiological analyses. To achieve this, polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-confirmed COVID-19 cases were extracted from the national laboratory system and linked with WGS data.

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Background: Enteric neuropathies, which result from abnormalities of the enteric nervous system, are associated with significant morbidity and high health-care costs, but current treatments are unsatisfactory. Cell-based therapy offers an innovative approach to replace the absent or abnormal enteric neurons and thereby restore gut function.

Methods: Enteric neuronal stem cells (ENSCs) were isolated from the gastrointestinal tract of Wnt1-Cre;R26tdTomato mice and generated neurospheres (NS).

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  • Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease that is more severe in individuals of African American ancestry compared to those of European American ancestry, highlighting the influence of genetics on the disease's clinical course.
  • The research involved analyzing DNA methylation patterns in SLE patients and controls to uncover differences linked to ancestry and the presence of Lupus Nephritis (LN).
  • A total of 51 differentially methylated positions were identified, primarily associated with genes involved in type I interferon signaling, indicating a potential genetic mechanism affecting SLE severity across different ancestries.
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  • - The study analyzed genomic data from 100 patients with early-onset or atypical dementia, including 68 newly described cases, predominantly composed of white, non-Hispanic individuals.
  • - Among the cohort, 53% had a returnable genetic variant, with 5 patients identified as having pathogenic variants according to established medical criteria.
  • - A comparison of polygenic risk scores revealed that early-onset Alzheimer's patients had higher scores than those with late-onset Alzheimer's, indicating both rare and common genetic factors contribute to the risk of early-onset neurodegenerative diseases.
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  • Concerns have been raised about the effectiveness of sotrovimab in reducing hospitalisation risk for the BA.2 sub-lineage of the Omicron variant compared to BA.1.
  • A study involving 8,850 individuals treated with sotrovimab was conducted to analyze the hospitalisation risks associated with both sub-lineages.
  • The findings indicated that the risk of hospital admission for BA.2 was similar to that of BA.1, with a hazard ratio suggesting no significant difference in hospitalisation rates.
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Background: Tauopathies are a group of neurodegenerative diseases driven by abnormal aggregates of tau, a microtubule associated protein encoded by the gene. expression is absent in neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and increases during differentiation. This temporally dynamic expression pattern suggests that expression is controlled by transcription factors and cis-regulatory elements specific to differentiated cell types.

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The frontal pole (Brodmann area 10, BA10) is the largest cytoarchitectonic region of the human cortex, performing complex integrative functions. BA10 undergoes intensive adolescent grey matter pruning prior to the age of onset for bipolar disorder (BP) and schizophrenia (SCHIZ), and its dysfunction is likely to underly aspects of their shared symptomology. In this study, we investigated the role of BA10 neurotransmission-related gene expression in BP and SCHIZ.

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  • * A deep-learning model can predict allele-specific activity using only local nucleotide sequences, emphasizing key transcription-factor-binding motifs affected by genetic variants.
  • * Combining EN-TEx with previous genome annotations shows significant connections between allele-specific loci and GWAS loci, and aids in transferring known eQTLs to challenging tissue types, improving personal functional genomics research.
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Tuft cells are solitary chemosensory epithelial cells that can sense lumenal stimuli at mucosal barriers and secrete effector molecules to regulate the physiology and immune state of their surrounding tissue. In the small intestine, tuft cells detect parasitic worms (helminths) and microbe-derived succinate, and signal to immune cells to trigger a Type 2 immune response that leads to extensive epithelial remodeling spanning several days. Acetylcholine (ACh) from airway tuft cells has been shown to stimulate acute changes in breathing and mucocilliary clearance, but its function in the intestine is unknown.

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  • - The study focuses on a Colombian family with a specific genetic mutation related to early-onset Alzheimer's disease, aiming to find genetic factors that affect the age at which the disease manifests.
  • - Researchers analyzed genetic data from 340 individuals carrying the PSEN1 E280A mutation and found 13 genetic variants linked to Alzheimer's onset, with three significant variants associated with the gene clusterin.
  • - The identified genetic variants are suggested to influence biological processes related to Alzheimer’s, highlighting their possible importance in developing future therapies, especially given the strong existing mutation linked to the disease.
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