Back to Search Start Over

Specific expression network analysis of diabetic nephropathy kidney tissue revealed key methylated sites

Authors :
Dingyu Zhu
Yonglan Wang
Linlin Sun
Wen-Wei Xu
Nan Zhang
Miao Ding
Xiaoxia Wang
Xinmiao Xie
Yan-Zhe Wang
Source :
Journal of cellular physiology. 233(10)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is one of the most common and serious complication in diabetes patients. However, the evidences of gene regulation mechanism and epigenetic modification with DN remain unclear. Therefore, it is necessary to search regulating genes for early diagnosis on DN. We identified tissue specific genes through mining the gene expression omnibus (GEO) public database, enriched function by gene ontology (GO), and kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (KEGG) analysis, and further compared tissue-specific network. Meanwhile, combining with differentially methylated sites, we explored the association epigenetic modification with the pathogenesis of DN. Glomeruli (Glom) may be the main tissue of signal recognition and tubulointerstitium (Tub) is mainly associated with energy metabolism in the occurrence of DN. By comparing tissue-specific networks between Glom and Tub, we screened 319 genes, which played an important role in multiple tissue on kidney. Among them, ANXA2, UBE2L6, MME, IQGAP, SLC7A7, and PLG played a key role in regulating the incidence of DN. Besides, we also identified 1 up-regulated gene (PIK3C2B) and 39 down-regulated genes (POLR2G, DDB1, and ZNF230, etc.) in the methylated data of Glom specific genes. In the Tub specific expressed genes, we identified two hypo-methylated genes (PPARA and GLS). Tub mainly caused abnormal energy metabolism, and Glom caused the changes in cell connections and histone modification. By analyzing differentially methylated sites and tissue-specific expressed genes, we found the change of methylated status about the core regulating genes may be a potential factor in the pathogenesis of DN.

Details

ISSN :
10974652
Volume :
233
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cellular physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....391564e3907c9e7d0c96ad4a4d26da66