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Changes in the Transcriptome and Long Non-Coding RNAs but Not the Methylome Occur in Human Cells Exposed to . | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Lyme disease, caused by spirochete bacteria, is becoming more common globally, but how it interacts with the host (humans) and ticks at the epigenetic level is not well understood.
  • - In a study using advanced sequencing techniques, researchers examined how two different human cell lines responded to a Lyme disease strain over 72 hours, discovering more gene expression changes in one type of cell (HUVECs) compared to another (HEK-293).
  • - The study found that while overall DNA methylation didn't change significantly, some long non-coding RNAs and a pseudogene in HUVECs were affected, indicating that infection might trigger different epigenetic responses.

Article Abstract

Lyme disease, caused by infection with members of the Lyme borreliosis group of spirochete bacteria, is increasing in frequency and distribution worldwide. Epigenetic interactions between the mammalian host, tick, and bacterial pathogen are poorly understood. In this study, high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) allowed for the in vitro study of the transcriptome, non-coding RNAs, and methylome in human host cells in response to infection. We tested the effect of the strain B31 on a human primary cell line (HUVEC) and an immortalized cell line (HEK-293) for 72 h, a long-duration time that might allow for epigenetic responses in the exposed human host cells. Differential gene expression was detected in both cell models in response to . More differentially expressed genes were found in HUVECs compared to HEK-293 cells. exposure significantly induced genes in the interferon, in addition to cytokine and other immune response signaling in HUVECs. In HEK-293 cells, pre-NOTCH processing in Golgi was significantly downregulated in -exposed cells. Other significantly altered gene expressions were found in genes involved in the extracellular matrix. No significant global methylation changes were detected in HUVECs or HEK-293 cells exposed to ; however, two long non-coding RNAs and a pseudogene were deregulated in response to in HUVECs, suggesting that other epigenetic mechanisms may be initiated by infection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11353914PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes15081010DOI Listing

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