| Literature DB >> 29312145 |
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short non-coding RNAs that posttranscriptionally regulate gene expression inside the cell. Extracellular circulating miRNAs are also observed outside the cell, but their origin is poorly understood. Recently, miRNA has been shown to be exocytosed by vesicle fusion; this observation demonstrates that vesicle-free miRNAs are secreted from neuroendocrine cells, in a manner similar to hormone secretion. miRNAs are stored in large dense-core vesicles together with catecholamines, then released by vesicle fusion in response to stimulation; in this way, vesicle-free miRNA may regulate cell-to-cell communication including the regulation of gene expression and cellular signaling. Therefore, miRNA has been suggested to function as a hormone; i.e., a ribomone (ribonucleotide + hormone). This review focuses on the mechanisms by which vesicle-free miRNAs are secreted from neuroendocrine cells and will discuss potential functions of vesicle-free miRNAs and how vesicle-free miRNAs regulate cell-to-cell communication.Entities:
Keywords: SNARE; chromaffin cells; fusion; large dense-core vesicles; microRNA; neuroendocrine cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 29312145 PMCID: PMC5743741 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Comparison of large dense-core vesicle (LDCV) and exosomea.
| LDCV | Exosomea | |
|---|---|---|
| Size (diameter) | 100–300 nm | 40–100 nm |
| Biogenesis/formation | Golgi complex | Multivesicular bodies, endosome |
| Agonaute2 and RNA-induced silencing complex | No ( | Yes ( |
| Copy number of miRNA | ~500 (miR-375) ( | <1 |
| Size distribution of RNA | Peak at ~22 nt ( | Broad distribution, 25–4,000 nt ( |
| Dominant RNA | ~60% miRNA ( | mRNA, miRNA is minor (<1–30% ( |
| Contents | Catecholamines, hormones, peptide, ATP, miRNA | Proteins, DNA, RNA, lipid ( |
| miRNA release mechanism | Neuronal SNARE (VAMP-2, syntaxin-1A, SNAP-25A) ( | Ceramide-dependent, ESCRT-independent ( |
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Figure 1Schematic diagram of the microRNAs (miRNA) exocytosis mechanisms (A) and the working hypothesis of the miRNA loading into large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs) (B). (A) Catecholamines (red ball) are typical neurotransmitters stored in LDCVs. LDCVs also contain a variety of miRNAs including miR-375. The assembly of neuronal SNAREs including VAMP-2, SNAP-25A, and syntaxin-1A mediates miRNA exocytosis from chromaffin cells, neuroendocrine cells. Synaptotagmin-1 (Syt-1) is considered as a Ca2+ (green ball) sensor to trigger miRNA exocytosis. The membrane insertion of Ca2+-bound Syt-1 results in the fusion pore formation. Ribomone hypothesis: miRNAs stored in vesicles together with classical neurotransmitters are released by vesicle fusion, thereby contributing to cell-to-cell communication (24). Two hypothetical functions of released extracellular miRNAs; (i) miRNAs might be taken up by endocytosis into target cells where miRNAs regulate gene expression. (ii) miRNAs might be able to stimulate receptors or ion channels as ligands, thereby leading to cellular signalling. Adapted from Gümürdü et al. (24). (B) The mechanisms by which miRNA or miRNA–protein complex can be loaded into LDCVs remain elusive. Structure of miRNA-binding protein is artificial for the simplicity.