Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function

ER stress is associated with beta-cell dysfunction in Type 2 diabetes (T2D). A recent study by Dorajoo and colleagues show that several ER stress implicated genes including HSP90B1, DNAJC3, UCHL1 are upregulated in pancreatic islets from Singaporean-Chinese donors. Besides these genes, OLMALINC,...

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Main Author: Tan, Patricia Yan Dan
Other Authors: Yusof Ali
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74672
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-746722023-02-28T18:06:40Z Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function Tan, Patricia Yan Dan Yusof Ali School of Biological Sciences DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences ER stress is associated with beta-cell dysfunction in Type 2 diabetes (T2D). A recent study by Dorajoo and colleagues show that several ER stress implicated genes including HSP90B1, DNAJC3, UCHL1 are upregulated in pancreatic islets from Singaporean-Chinese donors. Besides these genes, OLMALINC, a lincRNA with unknown function in beta-cells, was upregulated. We thus explored the effect of OLMALINC knockdown (KD) on expression of ER stress-related and beta-cell signature genes, under both normal and ER stress conditions. A second gene, ERO1β, shown to be important in mediating ER stress responses and beta-cell function in murine cell lines and mouse models, was also studied in the context of human beta-cells under normal and ER stress conditions. Our results show that OLMALINC KD had no significant impact on either beta-cell function or beta-cell responsiveness to heightened ER stress, suggesting that OLMALINC does not play a role in ER stress or significantly impact beta-cell identity and function. In contrast, ERO1β KD induced critical ER stress-related gene expression under ER stress conditions, corroborating murine models that ERO1β significantly impacted beta-cells responsiveness to ER stress. However, this effect was not seen in normal, nonER stress conditions. Our results propose that ERO1β downregulation in beta-cells may exacerbate ER stress, promote beta-cell dysfunction and thereby drive T2D pathogenesis. Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences 2018-05-23T02:06:30Z 2018-05-23T02:06:30Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74672 en Nanyang Technological University 36 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences
Tan, Patricia Yan Dan
Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
description ER stress is associated with beta-cell dysfunction in Type 2 diabetes (T2D). A recent study by Dorajoo and colleagues show that several ER stress implicated genes including HSP90B1, DNAJC3, UCHL1 are upregulated in pancreatic islets from Singaporean-Chinese donors. Besides these genes, OLMALINC, a lincRNA with unknown function in beta-cells, was upregulated. We thus explored the effect of OLMALINC knockdown (KD) on expression of ER stress-related and beta-cell signature genes, under both normal and ER stress conditions. A second gene, ERO1β, shown to be important in mediating ER stress responses and beta-cell function in murine cell lines and mouse models, was also studied in the context of human beta-cells under normal and ER stress conditions. Our results show that OLMALINC KD had no significant impact on either beta-cell function or beta-cell responsiveness to heightened ER stress, suggesting that OLMALINC does not play a role in ER stress or significantly impact beta-cell identity and function. In contrast, ERO1β KD induced critical ER stress-related gene expression under ER stress conditions, corroborating murine models that ERO1β significantly impacted beta-cells responsiveness to ER stress. However, this effect was not seen in normal, nonER stress conditions. Our results propose that ERO1β downregulation in beta-cells may exacerbate ER stress, promote beta-cell dysfunction and thereby drive T2D pathogenesis.
author2 Yusof Ali
author_facet Yusof Ali
Tan, Patricia Yan Dan
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Patricia Yan Dan
author_sort Tan, Patricia Yan Dan
title Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
title_short Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
title_full Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
title_fullStr Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
title_full_unstemmed Knockdown of two ER stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
title_sort knockdown of two er stress-related genes and their effect on pancreatic beta-cell function
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74672
_version_ 1759855348927168512