| Literature DB >> 24454381 |
Ram Babu Undi1, Ravinder Kandi1, Ravi Kumar Gutti1.
Abstract
The production of different types of blood cells including their formation, development, and differentiation is collectively known as haematopoiesis. Blood cells are divided into three lineages erythriod (erythrocytes), lymphoid (B and T cells), and myeloid (granulocytes, megakaryocytes, and macrophages). Haematopoiesis is a complex process regulated by several mechanisms including microRNAs (miRNAs). miRNAs are small RNAs which regulate the expression of a number of genes involved in commitment and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells. Evidence shows that miRNAs play an important role in haematopoiesis; for example, myeloid and erythroid differentiation is blocked by the overexpression of miR-15a. miR-221, miR-222, and miR-24 inhibit the erythropoiesis, whereas miR-150 plays a role in B and T cell differentiation. miR-146 and miR-10a are downregulated in megakaryopoiesis. Aberrant expression of miRNAs was observed in hematological malignancies including chronic myelogenous leukemia, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, multiple myelomas, and B cell lymphomas. In this review we have focused on discussing the role of miRNA in haematopoiesis.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24454381 PMCID: PMC3884629 DOI: 10.1155/2013/695754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Hematol
Figure 2miRNA mediated translation repression. (a) At initiation stage the miRNP (miRNA ribonucleoprotein complex) impairs the recognition of cap by eIF4E there by inhibiting the recruitment of ribosomal subunits onto the mRNA. (b) miRNA mediated degradation of mRNA by deadenylation of 3′−5′ exonuclease after recruiting CCR4-NOT to the polyadenylation site where GW182 is required to bind to miRNPs. Replacement of cap by decapping enzymes DCP1/2 hampers the translation initiation.
Figure 3miRNA mediated regulation of translation at postinitiation stage. (a) Ribosome drop-off is the proposed mechanism where translation is initiated and miRNA directed ribosomes to inhibit the translation prematurely. (b) Other possible mechanisms of miRNA mediated translation repression are nascent polypeptides which are degraded by proteosomes.
Proteins involved in miRNA biogenesis.
| Gene | Description | Location | Function | Domains | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dicer | Dicer 1, ribonuclease type II | 14q31 | miRNA processing | Type 111 restriction enzyme, RNase3, DEAH, helicase, dsRBD, PAZ | [ |
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| AGO3 | Argonaute 3 | 1p34-p34 | Short-interfering-RNA-mediated gene silencing | PAZ, PIWI, DUF1785, DUF2344, DUF2678 | [ |
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| Gemin3 | DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) box polypeptide 20 | 1p13.2 | RNA helicase | DEAD, Type 111 restriction enzyme, helicase C | [ |
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| Drosha | Drosha, ribonuclease type II | 5p14-p13 | Pri-miRNA processing | RNase3 domain, Double-stranded RNA binding motif | [ |
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| Exportin-5 | Karyopherin family | 6p21.1 | Transport of small RNAs | Importin-beta N-terminal domain, exportin 1-like protein | [ |
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| FMRP | Fragile X mental retardation 1 | Xq27.3 | mRNA trafficking | KH domain | [ |
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| ADAR | Adenosine deaminase, RNA-specific | 1q21.3 | RNA and miRNA editing | z-Alpha, Dsrm, Editase | [ |
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| TRBP | TAR (HIV-1) RNA binding protein | 12q12, q-13 | Dicer stabilization | DZF, dsRBD | [ |
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| Importin-8 | GTPase Ran mediate nuclear import | 12p11.21 | Nuclear localization of Argonaute proteins | Cse1 | [ |
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| ELAV1 | (Embryonic lethal, abnormal vision, | 19p13.2 | Repression of target sites | RBD | [ |
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| Dnd1 | Dead end homolog 1 | 5q31.3 | Inhibiting miRNA-mediated repression | PMP-22 | [ |
Figure 1Biogenesis of miRNA. miRNAs are transcribed into pri-miRNA and are capped and polyadenylated. This pri-miRNA is processed by Drosha and DGCR8 into pre-miRNA, which by Ran-GTP and Exportin-5 are transported into the cytoplasm and further processed by Dicer. The miRNA dissociates and with help of RISC gets involved in gene silencing by translation repression or degradation of target mRNA.
miRNA target prediction tools.
| Database | Description | URL | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| miRSystem | Predict the target genes and pathways |
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| miRanda | Predict targets by finding high complementarity regions in 3'UTR |
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| TargetScan | Detect target genes by perfect complementarity to the seed region |
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| PicTar | Seed match, binding energy, conservation |
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| DIANA-microT | Based on affinity interaction between miRNA and mRNA |
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| Mire | Based on miRNA; mRNA duplex stability properties |
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| RNA22 | Detect targets by pattern recognition and folding energy |
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| Tar Base | Curated database for experimentally |
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| miRNA MAP | Collection of experimentally verified miRNA targets |
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| MiRSel | Extraction of miRNA; gene interactions from the literature |
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| miRecords | Targets identified by 11 target prediction programmes |
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| MiRTarBase | Targets collected manually from the literature |
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| miRWalk | Target identification by complimentarity (perl language) |
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| Star Base | Use CLIP-Seq and Degradome-Seq data for miRNA target identification |
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| VHoT | It gives information of viral miRNA relation with host |
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| OMIT | Based on ontology design, data integration |
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| MiRPara | It uses support vector machine based software |
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miRNA nomenclature.
| Notation | Description |
|---|---|
| “hsa” (Eg. hsa-miR-21) | Species name ( |
| “miR” (Eg. hsa-mir-17) | Denotes immature form of miRNA (pre-miRNA) |
| “miR” (Eg. has-miR-10) | Refers to the mature form of miRNA |
| a and b notation (Eg. miR-147a, miR-147b) | When two miRNAs are similar except in 2 or 3 nt, then they are denoted by lowercased letters |
| Additional numbers in names | In case of two miRNAs are 100% similar, but they are located on different chromosomes and then they are denoted by extra dash followed by number |
| “∗” notation (Eg. miR-56/ miR-56*) | If the same precursor miRNA produces two miRNAs, then the less predominant one is denoted by∗ |
| 3p- and 5p- notation | If the data is not sufficient to know which one is predominant, then it is written as 3p- or 5p-. 3p- and 5p- indicate that it is derived from 3′, 5′ arms, respectively. |
Figure 4Scheme of Argonaute high-throughput sequencing of RNAs by cross linking and immunoprecipitation. RNA and protein are cross linked by UV and then RNA is digested by RNase, a treatment which is finally immunoprecipated. 5′ ends are dephosphorylated and 3′ ends are adapter ligated followed by phosphate addition at 5′ ends. The complexes of RNA and protein are separated by SDS-PAGE and RNA are amplified after 5′-adaptor ligation. These amplified products will be sequenced by next generation sequencers and finally computational approaches will help identify the miRNA target.
Figure 5Schematic representation of pulsed SILAC. Proteins of the culture medium of control and experimental sample are labelled with heavy and medium isotopes, respectively, by adding them to growth medium. After short time comparison of heavy and medium isotope signal intensities miRNA target mRNA will be detected.
Figure 6miRNA in megakaryopoiesis. miRNAs playing crucial role in the development of megakaryocyte (MegP-megakaryocyte progenitor, CMP-common myeloid progenitor, MEP-megakaryocyte erythroid progenitor).
miRNA involved in megakaryopoiesis.
| miRNA | Function | Putative targets | Reference |
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| miR-34a | MK differentiation of K562 cells, targets cMyb, CDKs, and MEK1 | HMGN4, CCDC52, KLRK1, RGS17, NFATCG | [ |
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| miR-155 | Downregulated in megakaryopoiesis, targets Meis-1 and Ets-1 | MMP16, SLC11A2, C2orf18 | [ |
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| miR-146a, miR-145 | Involved in megakaryopoiesis by activating innate immunity and mediates 5q syndrome phenotype | SOX11, SP1 | [ |
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| miR-146a | Increased in MK development and targets CXCR4 | CREBL2, NOTCH2, TRAK2, TBX18, RIN2, RAD23B, SLC1A2 | [ |
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| miR-150 | Favours megakaryocyte lineage differentiation; it targets cMyb, induced by TPO | SLC24A4 | [ |
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| miR-28 | It targets TPO receptor and prevents MK differentiation from CD34+ cells | [ | |
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| miR-27a | miR-27a targets and decrease RUNX1 levels | TRIM9, CYB5B, EGR2, BASP1 | [ |
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| miR-181a | miR-181a inhibit Ca2+ induced differentiation of MKs | [ | |
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| miR-125b-2 | Induces proliferation and differentiation of MKs | RAD98, ZNF100, PDS5B, SHE, CDR2 | [ |
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| miR-181 | Mediates MK differentiation by disrupting LIN28/let-7 axis | FOXP1, CCN8, HOXA1 | [ |
Figure 7miRNA in erythropoiesis. miRNA in the erythrocyte development. (EP-erythroid progenitor, BFU-E-burst forming unit erythroid, CFU-E-colony forming unit erythroid).
miRNAs involved in erythropoiesis.
| MiRNA | Function | Putative targets | Reference |
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| miR-144, miR-451 | Erythroid homeostasis, deficiency leads to splenomegaly, mild anaemia, and erythroid hyperplasia, controlled by GATA1 | TSPAN12, HMGCR, FBN2, MAP3K8, CXCL16, EREG, ATF2, CDKN2B | [ |
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| miR-451 | Erythroid differentiation defect and reduction in haematocrit in miRNA-451−/− mice | CDKN2B, CXCL16, EREG, ATF2 | [ |
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| miR-223 | Reduces the commitment of erythroid progenitors | LIN54, FOXO1, USP42, ALCAM, BCLAF1, SLC11A2 | [ |
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| miR-15b, mi16, miR-22 | Positive correlation with erythroid markers CD36, CD235a, and CD71 | PRDM4, KIF1B, LAMP3, SWAP70, LIN7C, AKT3, LAMC1 | [ |
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| miR-28 | Negatively correlate with CD71 | [ | |
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| miR-320 | Favours CD71 transcriptional activities | [ | |
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| miR-221, miR-222 | Inhibit normal erythropoiesis | TAF9B, MYLIP, RAB18, CYP7A1, KIF16B, MAT2A, NXN | [ |
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| miR-24 | Targets ALK4 | TRIB3, CBX5, KCNJ2, DGA52 | [ |
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| miR-15a | Transition from BFU-E to CFU-E stage | GFAP, SLC9A8, ZNRF2, FAM81A | [ |
Figure 8miRNA in T cell development. miRNA regulation at different developmental stages of T-cell development (CLP-common lymphoid progenitor, DN-double negative, DP-bouble positive).
Figure 9miRNA in B cell development and miRNA regulation of B-cell development from common lymphoid progenitor cell to produce memory and plasma cell.
miRNAs involved in AML.
| miRNA | Function | Putative targets | Reference |
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| miR-126* | Upregulation leads to chromosomal translocations and inhibits apoptosis | ADAT2,FOF1, LMO7, | [ |
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| miR-126 | Targets tumour suppressor PLK2 | TOM1, CKMT2, ZNF131, RGS3, | [ |
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| miR-223 | C/EBP | ANKH, SCN1A, SCN3A, CBFB, CDH11, NEBL, RILPL1, CENPN | [ |
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| miR-221 | Oncogenic miRNA, it inhibits the CDK inhibitor p27 | HIPK1, RAB18, DNM3, ZNF547, | [ |
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| miR-124a | Target the C/EBP | [ | |
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| miR-20a and miR-17 | Inhibits the p21 | POLQ, KLF12, STK38, CENTD1, NUP35, GNB5, CTSK | [ |
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| miR-29b | Tumour suppressor in AML and reduce tumorigenicity | SCML2, C1orf96, COL3A1, COL7A1, COL11A1 | [ |
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| miR-29b | Reduced expression of DNA methyltransferases | CD93, HBP1, SNX21, GNS, HMGCR, HNF4G, DNMT3B | [ |
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| miR-196a and miR-196b | They target ERG expression | FOS, GATA6, HOXB6, HOXC8, ZNF24, CCDC47 | [ |
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| miR-193b | Downregulated in AML and it targets c-Kit | MMP19, ARMC1, ARPC5 | [ |
miRNAs involved in CML.
| miRNA | Function | Putative targets | Reference |
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| miR-17-92 | Down-regulated in imatinib treated CML cells | IRF9, RAB10, TXNIP, TET2 | [ |
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| miR-21 | Antisense inhibition leads to inhibition of migration and cell growth and induces apoptosis | TXPAN2, LUM, SUZ12, MSH2, PDZD2 | [ |
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| miR-203 | Methylated in AML, CML, ALL, CLL. Inhibit the expression of BCR-ABL | RTKN2, AAK1, MYST4 CD109, IL21, PLD2 | [ |
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| miR-451 | Associated with Bcr-Abl | TSC1, ACADSB, GRSF1, MAML1, GDI1, NAMPT | [ |
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| miR-29b | Inhibits ABL1 and BCR/ABL1 there by inhibiting cell growth and colony formation | HAS3, SNX24, CD93, SCML2, COL7A1, ZNF396, HMGCR, ICOS | [ |
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| miR-138 | Represses BCR/ABL1 and CCND3, increases by GATA1 | KLF12, H3F3B, MYO5C, NXN, NEBL, PDPN, STK38 | [ |
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| miR-212 | Increases the ABCG2 expression | APAF1, EP300, EDNRA, CFL2, NOS1, SOX4, SOX11 | [ |