| Literature DB >> 26331031 |
Edyta Koscianska1, Wlodzimierz J Krzyzosiak1.
Abstract
The number of studies highlighting the role of microRNAs (miRNAs) in human physiology and diseases is growing, but many miRNA-driven regulatory mechanisms remain elusive. A proper understanding of the exact functions of individual miRNAs and their interaction with specific targets is vitally important because such knowledge might help cure diseases for which no effective treatment currently exists. Herein, we present current views on the role of the miRNA-mediated regulation of gene expression in the case of select spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) and their potential involvement in the pathogenesis of these diseases. Specifically, we summarize published data showing the known links between miRNAs and CAG repeat-dependent SCAs. Moreover, using the example of SCA type 3 (SCA3), we refer to the issue of prediction and validation of miRNA targets, and we demonstrate that miR-181a-1 may regulate the 3'-UTR of the ATXN3 gene.Entities:
Keywords: Ataxin; Luciferase assay; PolyQ expansion; TREDs; Target validation; miRNA
Year: 2014 PMID: 26331031 PMCID: PMC4552431 DOI: 10.1186/2053-8871-1-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum Ataxias ISSN: 2053-8871
Reported changes in miRNA expression in SCAs and their links with polyQ toxicity
| Observed changes | miRNA prediction | Experimental methods | Experimental models | Refs. |
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| miR-19, −101 and −130 downregulate the | Candidate miRNAs were identified using the PicTar algorithm. | Transfection with miRNA duplexes and their specific 2′-O-methyl inhibitors followed by western blot and RT-PCR analyses. miRNAs transfected to cells either individually or collectively. | MCF7 (highly express endogenous ATXN1), HEK293T, HeLa and NIH3T3 cell lines | [ |
| Eight miRNAs were chosen for further examination based on the number of target sites in the ATXN1 transcript and their neuronal expression. | ||||
| Luciferase reporter assays (Promega) with vectors carrying fragments or full length human ATXN1 3′-UTRs. | HeLa cell line | |||
| miRNA levels and their expression patterns in mouse cerebella were assessed by northern blot analysis and | C57/B6 WT mouse | |||
| Cell death assays with mutant ATXN1deprived of target sites. | HEK293T cell line | |||
| miRNA expression upregulated in SCA1 patients; the increase more prominent in the cortex samples | Regulatory RNA network and TargetScan prediction algorithms. | miRCURY LNA human microRNA Array (Exiqon). | Human cerebellum and cortex, SCA1 patients and healthy controls | [ |
| miR-144 slightly downregulated in SCA1 cerebellum but strongly induced in the cortex | qRT-PCR, TaqMan miRNA assays (Applied Biosystems) for miR-144 and miR-101. | |||
| Upregulated miRNAs predicted to target ATXN1, e.g., miR-101, -130a, -19a, -302 | ATXN1 mRNA and protein levels analyzed with RT-PCR and western blot. | |||
| miR-144 and −101 downregulate ATXN1 expression, miR-25 does not affect ATXN1 levels | Overexpression of miRNA duplexes and miRNA inhibitors followed by western blotting. | HEK293T cell line | ||
| Luciferase assays (Promega) with full-length ATXN1-3′-UTR-hLuc reporters and miRNA duplexes or 2′-O-methyl modified masking oligos. miRs 144 and 101 tested separately and in combination. | ||||
| No evidence for a statistically significant difference in miRNA expression. A trend to overexpression of miR-33-5p, −34-5p and -92a-5p | - | Illumina Hi-Seq 2000, small RNAs from fly heads |
| [ |
| 34 miRNAs upregulated; 14 at both time points, 15 at the 4-week time point only and 5 at the 12-week time point | miRCURY LNA all species microRNA arrays (Exiqon) | Cerebellar RNA from SCA1 BO5 transgenic mice [82Q] analyzed at two time points (at 4 and 12 weeks of age) | [ | |
| Individual miRNAs analyzed by qRT-PCR with TaqMan assays (miRs 150, 335, 23a, 24 and 143) | ||||
| 12 miRNAs downregulated; 1 miRNA at both time points, 4 and 7, respectively at the 4- and 12-week time points only | ||||
| miR-150 levels increased in cerebellar Purkinje neurons and slightly decreased in granule cells |
| SCA1 BO5 transgenic mice - Purkinje neurons, granule cells | ||
| A concomitant increase in miR-150 and decrease in | TargetScan; | Quantitative PCR and immunohistochemical analyses | SCA1 cerebella, Purkinje neurons | |
| A dose-dependent decrease in | Transient transfection with | Mouse Neuro2A | ||
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| Upregulation of | - | Confocal microscopy |
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| - | Phenotype mutants comparison analysis, TUNEL assays, immunostaining and western blots |
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| No evidence for a statistically significant difference in miRNA expression. A trend to a decrease in miR-1-3p and an increase in miR-100-5p, −33-5p and 92a-5p levels. | - | Illumina Hi-Seq 2000, small RNAs from fly heads |
| [ |
| miR-34b is upregulated, and miR-25, −125b, −29a are downregulated in SCA3 patients. Expression of miR-25 and -125b was associated with the course of disease. | miRbase, TargetScan and micro.org were used to search for miRNA binding sites in the human ATXN3 3′-UTR | miRCURY LNA human miRNA Array (Exiqon) (v.14.0), validation miRNA expression by qRT-PCR (Applied Biosystems) | Blood samples obtained from SCA3 patients (35) and control individuals (25) | [ |
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| No evidence for a statistically significant difference in miRNA expression. A trend to an increase in miR-33-5p and -92a-5p levels and a decrease in miR-375-3p | - | Illumina Hi-Seq 2000, small RNAs from fly heads |
| [ |
Figure 1Potential contribution of miRNAs to the pathogenesis of CAG repeat-dependent SCAs. A) The schematic presentation of the CAG expansion in the ATXN genes and CAG expansion-induced toxicity factors. B) The graphical presentation of the 3′-UTRs of SCA disease-causing genes. Grey rectangles represent appropriate 3′-UTRs. Their length is delineated and a scale of 1,000 nt is shown. Black numbers indicate the number of sites for miRNA families broadly conserved among vertebrates predicted by the TargetScanHuman algorithm (Release 6.2) [70]. Green numbers show the number of validated miRNA-target interactions collected in the miRTarBase (Release 4.5) [85]; bold green numbers and unbolded ones denote the number of interactions validated by methods providing strong and less strong evidence, respectively. C) Mechanisms of miRNA-mediated control of gene expression. The main regulatory activities of miRNAs and global deregulation of multiple genes are schematically presented. Additionally, essential methods used for validation of miRNA-mRNA interactions are listed.
Figure 2Validation of the interaction between miRNAs and mRNAs. A) Schematic representation of the standard reporter constructs used for the experimental validation of miRNA-mRNA interactions. WT, MUT and PM denote appropriate constructs; a construct bearing a wild-type potential binding site for the studied miRNA (WT), a construct with mutated binding site (MUT), and a construct with full complementarity (PM). B). Regulation of the ataxin-3 transcript by miR-9-2 and miR-181a-1. Relative repression of luciferase expression for both miRNAs is shown. The standard errors were calculated from independent experiments. The asterisk indicates statistical significance (p value < 0.05).