is an architectural RNA that provides the structural basis for nuclear bodies known as paraspeckles. Although the assembly processes by which organizes paraspeckle components are well-documented, the physiological functions of are not yet fully understood. This is partly because knockout (KO) mice, lacking paraspeckles, do not exhibit overt phenotypes under normal laboratory conditions. During our search for conditions that elicit clear phenotypes in KO mice, we discovered that the differentiation of beige adipocytes-inducible thermogenic cells that emerge upon cold exposure-is severely impaired in these mutant mice. , the architectural isoform of , is transiently upregulated during the early stages of beige adipocyte differentiation, coinciding with increased paraspeckle formation. Genes with altered expression during beige adipocyte differentiation typically cluster at specific chromosomal locations, some of which move closer to paraspeckles upon cold exposure. These observations suggest that paraspeckles might coordinate the regulation of these gene clusters by controlling the activity of certain transcriptional condensates that coregulate multiple genes. We propose that our findings highlight a potential role for and paraspeckles in modulating chromosomal organization and gene expression, potentially crucial processes for the differentiation of beige adipocytes.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11251523 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1261/rna.079972.124 | DOI Listing |
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