7 results on '"Popovitchenko T"'
Search Results
2. Reply to: Potential contribution of PEP carboxykinase-dependent malate dismutation to the hypoxia response in C. elegans.
- Author
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Vora M, Pyonteck SM, Popovitchenko T, Matlack TL, Prashar A, Kane NS, Favate J, Shah P, and Rongo C
- Subjects
- Animals, Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (GTP) metabolism, Photosynthesis, Caenorhabditis elegans metabolism, Malates
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The hypoxia response pathway promotes PEP carboxykinase and gluconeogenesis in C. elegans.
- Author
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Vora M, Pyonteck SM, Popovitchenko T, Matlack TL, Prashar A, Kane NS, Favate J, Shah P, and Rongo C
- Subjects
- Animals, Transcription Factors genetics, Cell Hypoxia, Hypoxia genetics, Oxygen, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit genetics, Caenorhabditis elegans genetics, Gluconeogenesis genetics
- Abstract
Actively dividing cells, including some cancers, rely on aerobic glycolysis rather than oxidative phosphorylation to generate energy, a phenomenon termed the Warburg effect. Constitutive activation of the Hypoxia Inducible Factor (HIF-1), a transcription factor known for mediating an adaptive response to oxygen deprivation (hypoxia), is a hallmark of the Warburg effect. HIF-1 is thought to promote glycolysis and suppress oxidative phosphorylation. Here, we instead show that HIF-1 can promote gluconeogenesis. Using a multiomics approach, we reveal the genomic, transcriptomic, and metabolomic landscapes regulated by constitutively active HIF-1 in C. elegans. We use RNA-seq and ChIP-seq under aerobic conditions to analyze mutants lacking EGL-9, a key negative regulator of HIF-1. We integrate these approaches to identify over two hundred genes directly and functionally upregulated by HIF-1, including the PEP carboxykinase PCK-1, a rate-limiting mediator of gluconeogenesis. This activation of PCK-1 by HIF-1 promotes survival in response to both oxidative and hypoxic stress. Our work identifies functional direct targets of HIF-1 in vivo, comprehensively describing the metabolome induced by HIF-1 activation in an organism., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Translational derepression of Elavl4 isoforms at their alternative 5' UTRs determines neuronal development.
- Author
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Popovitchenko T, Park Y, Page NF, Luo X, Krsnik Z, Liu Y, Salamon I, Stephenson JD, Kraushar ML, Volk NL, Patel SM, Wijeratne HRS, Li D, Suthar KS, Wach A, Sun M, Arnold SJ, Akamatsu W, Okano H, Paillard L, Zhang H, Buyske S, Kostovic I, De Rubeis S, Hart RP, and Rasin MR
- Subjects
- 5' Untranslated Regions genetics, Alternative Splicing, Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Female, Glutamic Acid metabolism, Male, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Neocortex cytology, Neural Stem Cells metabolism, Neuroglia metabolism, Neurons metabolism, Polyribosomes metabolism, Primary Cell Culture, Protein Biosynthesis genetics, RNA Isoforms genetics, RNA-Seq, CELF1 Protein metabolism, ELAV-Like Protein 4 genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Neocortex growth & development, Neurogenesis genetics
- Abstract
Neurodevelopment requires precise regulation of gene expression, including post-transcriptional regulatory events such as alternative splicing and mRNA translation. However, translational regulation of specific isoforms during neurodevelopment and the mechanisms behind it remain unknown. Using RNA-seq analysis of mouse neocortical polysomes, here we report translationally repressed and derepressed mRNA isoforms during neocortical neurogenesis whose orthologs include risk genes for neurodevelopmental disorders. We demonstrate that the translation of distinct mRNA isoforms of the RNA binding protein (RBP), Elavl4, in radial glia progenitors and early neurons depends on its alternative 5' UTRs. Furthermore, 5' UTR-driven Elavl4 isoform-specific translation depends on upstream control by another RBP, Celf1. Celf1 regulation of Elavl4 translation dictates development of glutamatergic neurons. Our findings reveal a dynamic interplay between distinct RBPs and alternative 5' UTRs in neuronal development and underscore the risk of post-transcriptional dysregulation in co-occurring neurodevelopmental disorders.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Transcriptional and Post-Transcriptional Mechanisms of the Development of Neocortical Lamination.
- Author
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Popovitchenko T and Rasin MR
- Abstract
The neocortex is a laminated brain structure that is the seat of higher cognitive capacity and responses, long-term memory, sensory and emotional functions, and voluntary motor behavior. Proper lamination requires that progenitor cells give rise to a neuron, that the immature neuron can migrate away from its mother cell and past other cells, and finally that the immature neuron can take its place and adopt a mature identity characterized by connectivity and gene expression; thus lamination proceeds through three steps: genesis, migration, and maturation. Each neocortical layer contains pyramidal neurons that share specific morphological and molecular characteristics that stem from their prenatal birth date. Transcription factors are dynamic proteins because of the cohort of downstream factors that they regulate. RNA-binding proteins are no less dynamic, and play important roles in every step of mRNA processing. Indeed, recent screens have uncovered post-transcriptional mechanisms as being integral regulatory mechanisms to neocortical development. Here, we summarize major aspects of neocortical laminar development, emphasizing transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms, with the aim of spurring increased understanding and study of its intricacies.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The frontier of RNA metamorphosis and ribosome signature in neocortical development.
- Author
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Kraushar ML, Popovitchenko T, Volk NL, and Rasin MR
- Subjects
- Animals, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Metamorphosis, Biological genetics, Neocortex growth & development, Ribosomes genetics
- Abstract
More than a passive effector of gene expression, mRNA translation (protein synthesis) by the ribosome is a rapidly tunable and dynamic molecular mechanism. Neurodevelopmental disorders are associated with abnormalities in mRNA translation, protein synthesis, and neocortical development; yet, we know little about the molecular mechanisms underlying these abnormalities. Furthermore, our understanding of regulation of the ribosome and mRNA translation during normal brain development is only in its early stages. mRNA translation is emerging as a key driver of the rapid and timed regulation of spatiotemporal gene expression in the developing nervous system, including the neocortex. In this review, we focus on the regulatory role of the ribosome in neocortical development, and construct a current understanding of how ribosomal complex specificity may contribute to the development of the neocortex. We also present a microarray analysis of ribosomal protein-coding mRNAs across the neurogenic phase of neocortical development, in addition to the dynamic enrichment of these mRNAs in actively translating neocortical polysomal ribosomes. Understanding the multivariate control of mRNA translation by ribosomal complex specificity will be critical to reveal the intricate mechanisms of normal brain development and pathologies of neurodevelopmental disorders., (Copyright © 2016 ISDN. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A combinatorial regulatory signature controls terminal differentiation of the dopaminergic nervous system in C. elegans.
- Author
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Doitsidou M, Flames N, Topalidou I, Abe N, Felton T, Remesal L, Popovitchenko T, Mann R, Chalfie M, and Hobert O
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Caenorhabditis elegans cytology, Caenorhabditis elegans metabolism, Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins genetics, Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins metabolism, Cell Differentiation genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis, Molecular Sequence Data, Nervous System cytology, Regulatory Elements, Transcriptional genetics, Sequence Alignment, Caenorhabditis elegans embryology, Caenorhabditis elegans genetics, Dopaminergic Neurons cytology, Dopaminergic Neurons metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Nervous System embryology
- Abstract
Terminal differentiation programs in the nervous system are encoded by cis-regulatory elements that control the expression of terminal features of individual neuron types. We decoded the regulatory information that controls the expression of five enzymes and transporters that define the terminal identity of all eight dopaminergic neurons in the nervous system of the Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodite. We show that the tightly coordinated, robust expression of these dopaminergic enzymes and transporters ("dopamine pathway") is ensured through a combinatorial cis-regulatory signature that is shared by all dopamine pathway genes. This signature is composed of an Ets domain-binding site, recognized by the previously described AST-1 Ets domain factor, and two distinct types of homeodomain-binding sites that act in a partially redundant manner. Through genetic screens, we identified the sole C. elegans Distalless/Dlx ortholog, ceh-43, as a factor that acts through one of the homeodomain sites to control both induction and maintenance of terminal dopaminergic fate. The second type of homeodomain site is a Pbx-type site, which is recognized in a partially redundant and neuron subtype-specific manner by two Pbx factors, ceh-20 and ceh-40, revealing novel roles of Pbx factors in the context of terminal neuron differentiation. Taken together, we revealed a specific regulatory signature and cognate, terminal selector-type transcription factors that define the entire dopaminergic nervous system of an animal. Dopaminergic neurons in the mouse olfactory bulb express a similar combinatorial transcription factor collective of Ets/Dlx/Pbx factors, suggesting deep phylogenetic conservation of dopaminergic regulatory programs.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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