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HT Experiment :

Experiment Id  GSE85646 Name  Neonatal cardiac dysfunction and transcriptome changes caused by the absence of Celf1
Experiment Type  RNA-Seq Study Type  Baseline and WT vs. Mutant
Source  GEO Curation Date  2022-09-09
description  The RNA binding protein Celf1 regulates alternative splicing in the nucleus and mRNA stability and translation in the cytoplasm. Celf1 is strongly down-regulated during mouse postnatal heart development. Its re-induction in adults induced severe heart failure and reversion to fetal splicing and gene expression patterns. However, the impact of Celf1 depletion on cardiac transcriptional and posttranscriptional dynamics in neonates has not been addressed. We found that homozygous Celf1 knock-out neonates exhibited cardiac dysfunction not observed in older homozygous animals, although homozygous mice are smaller than wild type littermates throughout development. RNA-sequencing of mRNA from homozygous neonatal hearts identified a network of cell cycle genes significantly up-regulated and down-regulation of ion transport and circadian genes. Cell cycle genes are enriched for Celf1 binding sites supporting a regulatory role in mRNA stability of these transcripts. We also identified a cardiac splicing network coordinated by Celf1 depletion. Target events contain multiple Celf1 binding sites and enrichment in GU-rich motifs. Identification of direct Celf1 targets will advance our knowledge in the mechanisms behind developmental networks regulated by Celf1 and diseases where Celf1 is mis-regulated. RNA-seq was performed in RNA samples of cardiac ventricles at postnatal day 3 (PN3) and at postnatal day 38 (PN38) from wild type mice or Celf1 knock out mice (homozygous)
  • variables:
  • genotype,
  • bulk RNA-seq,
  • developmental stage

1 Publications

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5 Samples

Trail: HTExperiment