Changes in the Coding and Non-coding Transcriptome and DNA Methylome that Define the Schwann Cell Repair Phenotype after Nerve Injury

Peter Arthur‐Farraj(University of Cambridge), Claire C. Morgan(Imperial College London), Martyna Adamowicz(Institute of Genetics and Cancer), Jose A. Gomez‐Sanchez(University College London), Shaline V. Fazal(University College London), Anthony Beucher(Imperial College London), Bonnie Razzaghi(Imperial College London), Rhona Mirsky(University College London), Kristján R. Jessen(University College London), Timothy J. Aitman(Institute of Genetics and Cancer)
Cell Reports
September 1, 2017
Cited by 213Open Access
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Abstract

Repair Schwann cells play a critical role in orchestrating nerve repair after injury, but the cellular and molecular processes that generate them are poorly understood. Here, we perform a combined whole-genome, coding and non-coding RNA and CpG methylation study following nerve injury. We show that genes involved in the epithelial-mesenchymal transition are enriched in repair cells, and we identify several long non-coding RNAs in Schwann cells. We demonstrate that the AP-1 transcription factor C-JUN regulates the expression of certain micro RNAs in repair Schwann cells, in particular miR-21 and miR-34. Surprisingly, unlike during development, changes in CpG methylation are limited in injury, restricted to specific locations, such as enhancer regions of Schwann cell-specific genes (e.g., Nedd4l), and close to local enrichment of AP-1 motifs. These genetic and epigenomic changes broaden our mechanistic understanding of the formation of repair Schwann cell during peripheral nervous system tissue repair.


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