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Understanding the role of short-interfering RNA (siRNA) in diverse biological processes is of current interest and often approached through small RNA sequencing. However, analysis of these datasets is difficult due to the complexity of biological RNA processing pathways, which differ between species. Several properties like strand specificity, length distribution, and distribution of soft-clipped bases are few parameters known to guide researchers in understanding the role of siRNAs. We present RAPID, a generic eukaryotic siRNA analysis pipeline, which captures information inherent in the datasets and automatically produces numerous visualizations as user-friendly HTML reports, covering multiple categories required for siRNA analysis. RAPID also facilitates an automated comparison of multiple datasets, with one of the normalization techniques dedicated for siRNA knockdown analysis, and integrates differential expression analysis using DESeq2.
KDEL receptors (KDELRs) represent transmembrane proteins of the secretory pathway which regulate the retention of soluble ER-residents as well as retrograde and anterograde vesicle trafficking. In addition, KDELRs are involved in the regulation of cellular stress response and ECM degradation. For a deeper insight into KDELR1 specific functions, we characterised a KDELR1-KO cell line (HAP1) through whole transcriptome analysis by comparing KDELR1-KO cells with its respective HAP1 wild-type. Our data indicate more than 300 significantly and differentially expressed genes whose gene products are mainly involved in developmental processes such as cell adhesion and ECM composition, pointing out to severe cellular disorders due to a loss of KDELR1. Impaired adhesion capacity of KDELR1-KO cells was further demonstrated through in vitro adhesion assays, while collagen- and/or laminin-coating nearly doubled the adhesion property of KDELR1-KO cells compared to wild-type, confirming a transcriptional adaptation to improve or restore the cellular adhesion capability. Perturbations within the secretory pathway were verified by an increased secretion of ER-resident PDI and decreased cell viability under ER stress conditions, suggesting KDELR1-KO cells to be severely impaired in maintaining cellular homeostasis.