Significant Variations in Double-Stranded RNA Levels in Cultured Skin Cells
Shaymaa Sadeq, Suwalak Chitcharoen, Surar Al-Hashimi, Somruthai Rattanaburi, John Casement, Andreas Werner

TL;DR
This study shows that melanoma cells and fibroblasts have different levels of double-stranded RNA, which can affect immune responses and cell survival.
Contribution
The study reveals significant differences in dsRNA levels and processing between cancer and normal skin cells.
Findings
Melanoma cells have lower mitochondrial dsRNA compared to fibroblasts.
Transposable elements are generally upregulated, not specific sub-families.
Cancer cells show minor adaptations despite large dsRNA differences.
Abstract
Endogenous double-stranded RNA has emerged as a potent stimulator of innate immunity. Under physiological conditions, endogenous dsRNA is maintained in the cell nucleus or the mitochondria; however, if protective mechanisms are breached, it leaches into the cytoplasm and triggers immune signaling pathways. Ectopic activation of innate immune pathways is associated with various diseases and senescence and can trigger apoptosis. Hereby, the level of cytoplasmic dsRNA is crucial. We have enriched dsRNA from two melanoma cell lines and primary dermal fibroblasts, including a competing probe, and analyzed the dsRNA transcriptome using RNA sequencing. There was a striking difference in read counts between the cell lines and the primary cells, and the effect was confirmed by northern blotting and immunocytochemistry. Both mitochondria (10–20%) and nuclear transcription (80–90%) contributed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRNA regulation and disease · interferon and immune responses · RNA Interference and Gene Delivery
