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The lncRNA landscape of cardiac resident macrophages and identification of Schlafenlnc as a regulator of macrophage migratory function

Authors

  • A. Dueck
  • L. Althaus
  • K. Heise
  • D. Esfandyari
  • S. Baygün
  • R.P. Brandes
  • J. Gagneur
  • N. Jaé
  • P. Knolle
  • M.S. Leisegang
  • L. Maegdefessel
  • T. Meitinger
  • D. Niessing
  • N. Petzold
  • D. Ramanujam
  • H. Sager
  • C. Schulz
  • E. Theodorakis
  • A. Uzonyi
  • T. Weinberger
  • I. Wittig
  • M. Bader
  • M. Schmidt-Supprian
  • S. Engelhardt

Journal

  • bioRxiv

Citation

  • bioRxiv

Abstract

  • Cardiac resident macrophages (crMPs) were recently shown to exert pivotal functions in cardiac homeostasis and disease, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are largely unclear. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are increasingly recognized as important regulatory molecules in a number of cell types, but neither the identity nor the molecular mechanisms of lncRNAs in crMPs are known. Here, we have employed deep RNA-seq and single cell RNA sequencing to resolve the crMP lncRNA landscape from healthy and diseased murine myocardium. CrMPs express previously unknown and highly cell type-specific lncRNAs, among which one lncRNA, termed Schlafenlnc, was particularly abundant and enriched in crMPs. We found Schlafenlnc to be necessary for migration-associated gene expression in macrophages in vitro and in vivo and essential for their adhesion and migration. Collectively, our data provide a basis to the systematic characterization of lncRNAs in crMPs and establish Schlafenlnc as a critical regulator of macrophage migratory functions.


DOI

doi:10.1101/2022.11.30.518576