In vivo functional analysis of non-conserved human lncRNAs associated with cardiometabolic traits

Xiangbo Ruan(National Institutes of Health), Ping Li(National Institutes of Health), Yi Chen(National Institutes of Health), Yu Shi(National Institutes of Health), Mehdi Pirooznia(National Institutes of Health), Fayaz Seifuddin(National Institutes of Health), Hiroshi Suemizu(Central Institute for Experimental Animals), Yasuyuki Ohnishi(Central Institute for Experimental Animals), Nao Yoneda(Central Institute for Experimental Animals), Megumi Nishiwaki(Central Institute for Experimental Animals), James L. Shepherdson(National Institutes of Health), Abhilash Suresh(National Institutes of Health), Komudi Singh(National Institutes of Health), Yonghe Ma(National Institutes of Health), Chengfei Jiang(National Institutes of Health), Haiming Cao(National Institutes of Health)
Nature Communications
January 2, 2020
Cited by 124Open Access
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Abstract

Unlike protein-coding genes, the majority of human long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are considered non-conserved. Although lncRNAs have been shown to function in diverse pathophysiological processes in mice, it remains largely unknown whether human lncRNAs have such in vivo functions. Here, we describe an integrated pipeline to define the in vivo function of non-conserved human lncRNAs. We first identify lncRNAs with high function potential using multiple indicators derived from human genetic data related to cardiometabolic traits, then define lncRNA's function and specific target genes by integrating its correlated biological pathways in humans and co-regulated genes in a humanized mouse model. Finally, we demonstrate that the in vivo function of human-specific lncRNAs can be successfully examined in the humanized mouse model, and experimentally validate the predicted function of an obesity-associated lncRNA, LINC01018, in regulating the expression of genes in fatty acid oxidation in humanized livers through its interaction with RNA-binding protein HuR.


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