Functional importance of cardiac enhancer-associated noncoding RNAs in heart development and disease

Samir Ounzain(University of Lausanne), Iole Pezzuto(University of Lausanne), Rudi Micheletti(University of Lausanne), Frédéric Burdet(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Razan Sheta(University of Lausanne), Mohamed Nemir(University of Lausanne), Christine R. Gonzales(University of Lausanne), Alexandre Sarre(University of Lausanne), Michael Alexanian(University of Lausanne), Matthew J. Blow(Joint Genome Institute), Dalit May(Joint Genome Institute), Rory Johnson(Centre for Genomic Regulation), Jérôme Dauvillier(University of Lausanne), L Pennacchio(Joint Genome Institute), Thierry Pedrazzini(University of Lausanne)
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
August 19, 2014
Cited by 140Open Access
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Abstract

The key information processing units within gene regulatory networks are enhancers. Enhancer activity is associated with the production of tissue-specific noncoding RNAs, yet the existence of such transcripts during cardiac development has not been established. Using an integrated genomic approach, we demonstrate that fetal cardiac enhancers generate long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) during cardiac differentiation and morphogenesis. Enhancer expression correlates with the emergence of active enhancer chromatin states, the initiation of RNA polymerase II at enhancer loci and expression of target genes. Orthologous human sequences are also transcribed in fetal human hearts and cardiac progenitor cells. Through a systematic bioinformatic analysis, we identified and characterized, for the first time, a catalog of lncRNAs that are expressed during embryonic stem cell differentiation into cardiomyocytes and associated with active cardiac enhancer sequences. RNA-sequencing demonstrates that many of these transcripts are polyadenylated, multi-exonic long noncoding RNAs. Moreover, knockdown of two enhancer-associated lncRNAs resulted in the specific downregulation of their predicted target genes. Interestingly, the reactivation of the fetal gene program, a hallmark of the stress response in the adult heart, is accompanied by increased expression of fetal cardiac enhancer transcripts. Altogether, these findings demonstrate that the activity of cardiac enhancers and expression of their target genes are associated with the production of enhancer-derived lncRNAs.


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