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Dive into the research topics where Owen M. Rennert is active.

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Featured researches published by Owen M. Rennert.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007

Mitochondria as key components of the stress response

Irini Manoli; Salvatore Alesci; Marc R. Blackman; Yan A. Su; Owen M. Rennert; George P. Chrousos

The exquisitely orchestrated adaptive response to stressors that challenge the homeostasis of the cell and organism involves important changes in mitochondrial function. A complex signaling network enables mitochondria to sense internal milieu or environmental changes and to adjust their bioenergetic, thermogenic, oxidative and/or apoptotic responses accordingly, aiming at re-establishment of homeostasis. Mitochondrial dysfunction is increasingly recognized as a key component in both acute and chronic allostatic states, although the extent of its role in the pathogenesis of such conditions remains controversial. Genetic and environmental factors that determine mitochondrial function might contribute to the significant variation of the stress response. Understanding the often reciprocal interplay between stress mediators and mitochondrial function is likely to help identify potential therapeutic targets for many stress and mitochondria-related pathologies.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2014

Identification of differentially expressed microRNAs across the developing human brain

Mark N. Ziats; Owen M. Rennert

We present a spatio-temporal assessment of microRNA (miRNA) expression throughout early human brain development. We assessed the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of 18 normal human donor brains spanning infancy through adolescence by RNA-seq. We discovered differentially expressed miRNAs and broad miRNA patterns across both temporal and spatial dimensions, and between male and female prefrontal cortex. Putative target genes of the differentially expressed miRNAs were identified, which demonstrated functional enrichment for transcription regulation, synaptogenesis and other basic intracellular processes. Sex-biased miRNAs also targeted genes related to Wnt and transforming growth factor-beta pathways. The differentially expressed miRNA targets were highly enriched for gene sets related to autism, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression, but not neurodegenerative diseases, epilepsy or other adult-onset psychiatric diseases. Our results suggest critical roles for the identified miRNAs in transcriptional networks of the developing human brain and neurodevelopmental disorders.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2013

Aberrant Expression of Long Noncoding RNAs in Autistic Brain

Mark N. Ziats; Owen M. Rennert

The autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have a significant hereditary component, but the implicated genetic loci are heterogeneous and complex. Consequently, there is a gap in understanding how diverse genomic aberrations all result in one clinical ASD phenotype. Gene expression studies from autism brain tissue have demonstrated that aberrantly expressed protein-coding genes may converge onto common molecular pathways, potentially reconciling the strong heritability and shared clinical phenotypes with the genomic heterogeneity of the disorder. However, the regulation of gene expression is extremely complex and governed by many mechanisms, including noncoding RNAs. Yet no study in ASD brain tissue has assessed for changes in regulatory long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), which represent a large proportion of the human transcriptome, and actively modulate mRNA expression. To assess if aberrant expression of lncRNAs may play a role in the molecular pathogenesis of ASD, we profiled over 33,000 annotated lncRNAs and 30,000 mRNA transcripts from postmortem brain tissue of autistic and control prefrontal cortex and cerebellum by microarray. We detected over 200 differentially expressed lncRNAs in ASD, which were enriched for genomic regions containing genes related to neurodevelopment and psychiatric disease. Additionally, comparison of differences in expression of mRNAs between prefrontal cortex and cerebellum within individual donors showed ASD brains had more transcriptional homogeneity. Moreover, this was also true of the lncRNA transcriptome. Our results suggest that further investigation of lncRNA expression in autistic brain may further elucidate the molecular pathogenesis of this disorder.


Oncogene | 2011

Methylation of an intronic region regulates miR-199a in testicular tumor malignancy.

Hoi-Hung Cheung; Davis Aj; Tin-Lap Lee; Alan Lap-Yin Pang; Nagrani S; Owen M. Rennert; Wai-Yee Chan

In the testicular cancer cell line, NT2, we previously demonstrated that differentially methylated regions were located in introns or intergenic regions, and postulated these might regulate non-coding RNAs. Three microRNAs and three small nucleolar RNAs were differentially methylated; one, miR-199a, was associated with the progression and prognosis of gastric and ovarian cancers. In this report we document, by epigenomic profiling of testicular tissue, that miR-199a is transcribed as antisense of dynamin 3 (chromosome 1q24.3), and hypermethylation of this region is correlated with miR-199a-5p/3p repression and tumor malignancy. Re-expression of miR-199a in testicular cancer cells led to suppression of cell growth, cancer migration, invasion and metastasis. The miR-199a-5p, one of two mature miRNA species derived from miR-199a, is associated with tumor malignancy. We further identified the embryonal carcinoma antigen podocalyxin-like protein 1 (PODXL), an anti-adhesive protein expressed in aggressive tumors, as a target of miR-199a-5p. We demonstrated PODXL is overexpressed in malignant testicular tumor, and cellular depletion of PODXL resulted in suppression of cancer invasion. The inverse relationship between PODXL and miR-199a-5p expression suggests PODXL is a downstream effector mediating the action of miR199a-5p. This report identifies DNA methylation, miR-199a dysregulation and PODXL as critical factors in tumor malignancy.


British Journal of Cancer | 2010

Genome-wide DNA methylation profiling reveals novel epigenetically regulated genes and non-coding RNAs in human testicular cancer

Hoi-Hung Cheung; Tin-Lap Lee; Davis Aj; D H Taft; Owen M. Rennert; Wai-Yee Chan

Background:Testicular germ cell tumour (TGCT) is the most common malignant tumour in young males. Although aberrant DNA methylation is implicated in the pathophysiology of many cancers, only a limited number of genes are known to be epigenetically changed in TGCT. This report documents the genome-wide analysis of differential methylation in an in vitro model culture system. Interesting genes were validated in TGCT patient samples.Methods:In this study, we used methylated DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP) and whole-genome tiling arrays to identify differentially methylated regions (DMRs).Results:We identified 35 208 DMRs. However, only a small number of DMRs mapped to promoters. A genome-wide analysis of gene expression revealed a group of differentially expressed genes that were regulated by DNA methylation. We identified several candidate genes, including APOLD1, PCDH10 and RGAG1, which were dysregulated in TGCT patient samples. Surprisingly, APOLD1 had previously been mapped to the TGCT susceptibility locus at 12p13.1, suggesting that it may be important in TGCT pathogenesis. We also observed aberrant methylation in the loci of some non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). One of the ncRNAs, hsa-mir-199a, was downregulated in TGCT patient samples, and also in our in vitro model culture system.Conclusion:This report is the first application of MeDIP-chip for identifying epigenetically regulated genes and ncRNAs in TGCT. We also demonstrated the function of intergenic and intronic DMRs in the regulation of ncRNAs.


Birth Defects Research Part C-embryo Today-reviews | 2009

DNA methylation of cancer genome

Hoi-Hung Cheung; Tin-Lap Lee; Owen M. Rennert; Wai-Yee Chan

DNA methylation plays an important role in regulating normal development and carcinogenesis. Current understanding of the biological roles of DNA methylation is limited to its role in the regulation of gene transcription, genomic imprinting, genomic stability, and X chromosome inactivation. In the past 2 decades, a large number of changes have been identified in cancer epigenomes when compared with normals. These alterations fall into two main categories, namely, hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes and hypomethylation of oncogenes or heterochromatin, respectively. Aberrant methylation of genes controlling the cell cycle, proliferation, apoptosis, metastasis, drug resistance, and intracellular signaling has been identified in multiple cancer types. Recent advancements in whole-genome analysis of methylome have yielded numerous differentially methylated regions, the functions of which are largely unknown. With the development of high resolution tiling microarrays and high throughput DNA sequencing, more cancer methylomes will be profiled, facilitating the identification of new candidate genes or ncRNAs that are related to oncogenesis, new prognostic markers, and the discovery of new target genes for cancer therapy.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1973

Acrodermatitis enteropathica with immune deficiency

Richard L. Julius; Martin Schulkind; Terry Sprinkle; Owen M. Rennert

A male infant presented with alopecia, eczematoid dermatitis, chronic diarrhea, and failure to thrive. The usual causes of chronic malabsorption were ruled out. Acrodermatitis enteropathica was diagnosed. A trial of oral Diodoquin and breast milk as the only source of nutrition resulted in rapid amelioration of symptoms. The patient acquired secondary diarrhea and secondary infections with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli , Candida, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and subsequently died of sepsis. Studies of serum and tears revealed a marked deficiency of immunoglobulins. Necropsy demonstrated a generalized defect in his immunopoietic tissues. There were low levels of the essential fatty acids in serum. The observations in this case suggest that acrodermatitis enteropathica may in some instances be the clinical expression of a primary immune disorder.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Expression Profiling of Autism Candidate Genes during Human Brain Development Implicates Central Immune Signaling Pathways

Mark N. Ziats; Owen M. Rennert

The Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) represent a clinically heterogeneous set of conditions with strong hereditary components. Despite substantial efforts to uncover the genetic basis of ASD, the genomic etiology appears complex and a clear understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying Autism remains elusive. We hypothesized that focusing gene interaction networks on ASD-implicated genes that are highly expressed in the developing brain may reveal core mechanisms that are otherwise obscured by the genomic heterogeneity of the disorder. Here we report an in silico study of the gene expression profile from ASD-implicated genes in the unaffected developing human brain. By implementing a biologically relevant approach, we identified a subset of highly expressed ASD-candidate genes from which interactome networks were derived. Strikingly, immune signaling through NFκB, Tnf, and Jnk was central to ASD networks at multiple levels of our analysis, and cell-type specific expression suggested glia—in addition to neurons—deserve consideration. This work provides integrated genomic evidence that ASD-implicated genes may converge on central cytokine signaling pathways.


Pediatric Research | 1985

Zinc deficiency acts as a co-teratogen with alcohol in fetal alcohol syndrome.

Laura Davis Keppen; Theodore J. Pysher; Owen M. Rennert

ABSTRACT: Because alcoholism has adverse effects on zinc nutrition and many pregnant women consume less than the recommended dietary allowances of zinc, we postulated that zinc deficiency acts as a co-teratogen with alcohol in the fetal alcohol syndrome. We compared the effects of alcohol on progeny of pregnant mice fed a zinc-deficient diet compared to those fed a diet with adequate zinc. Pregnant CBA mice ((n = 66) were fed the Lieber-DeCarli liquid diet with 0, 15, or 20% ethanol-derived calories containing 0.3 (low) or 8.5 (high) μg zinc/ml. Dams were sacrificed on day 18 of gestation. Resorptions, malformations, and individual fetal weights were recorded. Analysis of fetuses included assays for zinc, assessment of soft tissue malformations, and alizarin red staining for skeletal malformations. Fetal weights were lower in the groups fed the zinc-deficient diet for each concentration of alcohol ((p < 0.005). The groups fed the combination of low zinc plus alcohol had 37-52% resorptions, while the animals on the zinc-deficient diet without alcohol or the high zinc diet with alcohol had 0-2% resorptions. Skeletal malformations were related to alcohol concentration but not zinc intake, while external malformations were higher in those maintained on the low zinc-ethanol diet. These results suggest that zinc deficiency potentiated the teratogenic effects of alcohol and that nutritional intervention for alcoholic women during pregnancy might reduce the incidence or severity of fetal alcohol syndrome.


Stem cell reports | 2014

Telomerase Protects Werner Syndrome Lineage-Specific Stem Cells from Premature Aging

Hoi-Hung Cheung; Xiaozhuo Liu; Lucile Canterel-Thouennon; Lu Li; Catherine Edmonson; Owen M. Rennert

Summary Werner syndrome (WS) patients exhibit premature aging predominantly in mesenchyme-derived tissues, but not in neural lineages, a consequence of telomere dysfunction and accelerated senescence. The cause of this lineage-specific aging remains unknown. Here, we document that reprogramming of WS fibroblasts to pluripotency elongated telomere length and prevented telomere dysfunction. To obtain mechanistic insight into the origin of tissue-specific aging, we differentiated iPSCs to mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and neural stem/progenitor cells (NPCs). We observed recurrence of premature senescence associated with accelerated telomere attrition and defective synthesis of the lagging strand telomeres in MSCs, but not in NPCs. We postulate this “aging” discrepancy is regulated by telomerase. Expression of hTERT or p53 knockdown ameliorated the accelerated aging phenotypein MSC, whereas inhibition of telomerase sensitized NPCs to DNA damage. Our findings unveil a role for telomerase in the protection of accelerated aging in a specific lineage of stem cells.

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Wai-Yee Chan

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Tin-Lap Lee

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Wai-Yee Chan

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Hoi-Hung Cheung

National Institutes of Health

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Vanessa Baxendale

National Institutes of Health

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Alan Lap-Yin Pang

National Institutes of Health

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Margarita Raygada

National Institutes of Health

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