4.6 Article

Role of oxidative stress in Retinitis pigmentosa: new involved pathways by an RNA-Seq analysis

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 84-104

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15384101.2018.1558873

Keywords

RNA-Seq; RPE; Retinitis pigmentosa; pathway; enrichment

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Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a very heterogeneous inherited ocular disorder group characterized by progressive retinal disruption. Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) degeneration, due to oxidative stress which arrests the metabolic support to photoreceptors, represents one of the principal causes of RP. Here, the role of oxidative stress in RP onset and progression was analyzed by a comparative whole transcriptome analysis of human RPE cells, treated with 100 mu g/ml of oxLDL and untreated, at different time points. Experiment was thrice repeated and performed on Ion Proton(TM) sequencing system. Data analysis, including low quality reads trimming and gene expression quantification, was realized by CLC Genomics Workbench software. The whole analysis highlighted 14 clustered macro-pathways and many sub-pathways, classified by selection of 5271 genes showing the highest alteration of expression. Among them, 23 genes were already known to be RP causative ones (15 over-expressed and 8 down-expressed), and their enrichment and intersection analyses highlighted new 77 candidate related genes (49 over-expressed and 28 down-expressed). A final filtering analysis then highlighted 29 proposed candidate genes. This data suggests that many new genes, not yet associated with RP, could influence its etiopathogenesis.

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