A long noncoding RNA associated with susceptibility to celiac disease

Authors
Castellanos-Rubio A1, Fernandez-Jimenez N2, Kratchmarov R1, Luo X3, Bhagat G4, Green PH5, Schneider R6, Kiledjian M3, Bilbao JR2, Ghosh S7.
04-20-2016
12:00pm
PST
Categories
RNA & Disease
Speaker
James Blau
Abstract
Recent studies have implicated long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) as regulators of many important biological processes. Here we report on the identification and characterization of a lncRNA, lnc13, that harbors a celiac disease–associated haplotype block and represses expression of certain inflammatory genes under homeostatic conditions. Lnc13 regulates gene expression by binding to hnRNPD, a member of a family of ubiquitously expressed heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs). Upon stimulation, lnc13 levels are reduced, thereby allowing increased expression of the repressed genes. Lnc13 levels are significantly decreased in small intestinal biopsy samples from patients with celiac disease, which suggests that down-regulation of lnc13 may contribute to the inflammation seen in this disease. Furthermore, the lnc13 disease-associated variant binds hnRNPD less efficiently than its wild-type counterpart, thus helping to explain how these single-nucleotide polymorphisms contribute to celiac disease.