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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Transcriptomic Analyses Reveal 2 and 4 Family Members of Cytochromes P450 (CYP) Involved in LPS Inflammatory Response in Pharynx of Ciona robusta

Massimo La RosaMirella VazzanaManuela MauroAntonino FiannacaVincenzo ArizzaAlfonso UrsoAiti VizziniAngela BonuraLaura La Paglia

subject

LipopolysaccharidesLPSCytochromeQH301-705.5cytochrome P450In silicoInflammationArticleGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicCatalysisInorganic ChemistryTranscriptomeCytochrome P-450 Enzyme SystemmicroRNAmedicineAnimalsBiology (General)Physical and Theoretical ChemistryQD1-999Ciona robusta<i>Ciona robusta</i>Molecular BiologyGenePhylogenySpectroscopymiRNAInflammationGeneticschemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyGene Expression ProfilingOrganic ChemistryHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingCytochrome P450General MedicineCiona intestinalisComputer Science ApplicationsChemistryEnzymechemistryMultigene FamilyNGSbiology.proteinPharynxmedicine.symptomTranscriptome

description

Cytochromes P450 (CYP) are enzymes responsible for the biotransformation of most endogenous and exogenous agents. The expression of each CYP is influenced by a unique combination of mechanisms and factors including genetic polymorphisms, induction by xenobiotics, and regulation by cytokines and hormones. In recent years, Ciona robusta, one of the closest living relatives of vertebrates, has become a model in various fields of biology, in particular for studying inflammatory response. Using an in vivo LPS exposure strategy, next-generation sequencing (NGS) and qRT-PCR combined with bioinformatics and in silico analyses, compared whole pharynx transcripts from naïve and LPS-exposed C. robusta, and we provide the first view of cytochrome genes expression and miRNA regulation in the inflammatory response induced by LPS in a hematopoietic organ. In C. robusta, cytochromes belonging to 2B,2C, 2J, 2U, 4B and 4F subfamilies were deregulated and miRNA network interactions suggest that different conserved and species-specific miRNAs are involved in post-transcriptional regulation of cytochrome genes and that there could be an interplay between specific miRNAs regulating both inflammation and cytochrome molecules in the inflammatory response in C. robusta.

https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222011141