| Literature DB >> 30455620 |
Laura Stappert1, Frederike Klaus1, Oliver Brüstle1.
Abstract
The finding that the adult mammalian brain is still capable of producing neurons has ignited a new field of research aiming to identify the molecular mechanisms regulating adult neurogenesis. An improved understanding of these mechanisms could lead to the development of novel approaches to delay cognitive decline and facilitate neuroregeneration in the adult human brain. Accumulating evidence suggest microRNAs (miRNAs), which represent a class of post-transcriptional gene expression regulators, as crucial part of the gene regulatory networks governing adult neurogenesis. This review attempts to illustrate how miRNAs modulate key processes in the adult neurogenic niche by interacting with each other and with transcriptional regulators. We discuss the function of miRNAs in adult neurogenesis following the life-journey of an adult-born neuron from the adult neural stem cell (NSCs) compartment to its final target site. We first survey how miRNAs control the initial step of adult neurogenesis, that is the transition of quiescent to activated proliferative adult NSCs, and then go on to discuss the role of miRNAs to regulate neuronal differentiation, survival, and functional integration of the newborn neurons. In this context, we highlight miRNAs that converge on functionally related targets or act within cross talking gene regulatory networks. The cooperative manner of miRNA action and the broad target repertoire of each individual miRNA could make the miRNA system a promising tool to gain control on adult NSCs in the context of therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: adult neurogenesis; feedback loops; hippocampus; miRNA convergence; microRNAs; neural stem cells; neurons
Year: 2018 PMID: 30455620 PMCID: PMC6230569 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00707
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1MicroRNAs as key regulators of the multistep process of adult neurogenesis. (A) The adult mouse brain contains two main neurogenic niches, i.e., the subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricle (LV), which produces neurons for the olfactory bulb (OB), and the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG). (B) The adult neural stem cells (aNSCs) of the subventricular zone are called type B cells. They give rise to intermediate progenitors (IPCs, type C cells), which after a few cell cycles develop into type A neuroblasts that migrate along the rostral migratory stream (RMS) to the OB before terminal differentiation (Doetsch et al., 1997). (C) The aNSCs of the SGZ of the dentate gyrus are called type 1 cells and the IPCs to which they develop are designated as type 2, the neuroblasts as type 3 cells (Seri et al., 2004). The neuroblasts generated from the SGZ migrate up into the granule cell layer (GCL), where they maturate into granule cells, extend dendrites into the molecular layer (ML), and grow axons. (D) Adult neurogenesis is a multistep process that begins with activation of quiescent aNSCs to re-enter cell cycling, followed by a proliferation phase of aNSCs, which eventually develop into IPCs and further differentiate into neuroblasts. The last steps of adult neurogenesis involve neuroblast migration and functional maturation into terminally differentiated neurons. For all these steps, regulatory miRNAs have been identified that either have a positive (green), negative (red), or modulatory (black) effect. Underlined miRNAs have been studied in the context of adult neurogenesis, whereas the function of the other miRNAs has been inferred from studies addressing developmental neurogenesis. The miRNAs miR-106b-25(1), miR-17-92(1) and miR-19(1) belong to the family of polycistronic miR-17 clusters. There are divergent results for miRNA-137(2), which was found to have a pro-differentiation effect in embryonic NSCs (Sun et al., 2011), but an anti-differentiation effect in adult NSCs (Szulwach et al., 2010).
FIGURE 2Canonical miRNA biogenesis and function. miRNA genes are transcribed by RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) and then processed by the sequential action of Drosha and Dicer to liberate the mature miRNA duplex, which is then loaded onto Argonaut proteins (Ago) to form the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). As part of the RISC, miRNAs can bind to target mRNAs whereby binding of the miRNA seed sequence is the key requirement for mRNA target recognition. Thus, miRNAs with the same seed sequence are thought to target overlapping sets of mRNAs and are assigned to the same miRNA seed family. miRNA genes can be either monocistronic (miRNA C) or polycistronic (clusters A and B) containing several miRNAs that are usually expressed as one pri-miRNA transcript. Some polycistronic clusters comprise miRNA homologs that have emerged via duplication events (cluster B with miR-B2a, B2b as homologous miRNAs) whereas other clusters consist of miRNAs belonging to different seed families (here exemplarily designated as seed family 1 (in blue) with miRNAs A1, B1, C1, and seed family 2 (in green) with miRNAs A2, B2a, and B2b). For more details on miRNA biogenesis and polycistronic miRNA clusters, see the reviews from Ha and Kim (2014) and Olive et al. (2015), respectively.
MicroRNAs modulating proliferation and differentiation during adult neurogenesis.
| MicroRNA | Main model system | Observed main effect | miRNA regulator | Target mRNA | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse primary neonatal forebrain NSCs | let-7 decreases NSC proliferation | ||||
| Mouse embryonic VZ, | |||||
| Mouse embryonic VZ, | |||||
| Human embryonal carcinoma cell line | miR-9/9∗ and the REST silencing complex form a double negative feedback loop | REST | |||
| Human neuroblastoma cell line | miR-9 expression is inhibited by Rest in undifferentiated cells and promoted by CREB in differentiated cells, miR-9 targets | REST, CREB | |||
| Mouse embryonal carcinoma cell line | REST prevents miR-124 expression in neural progenitors | REST | |||
| Chick neural tube, mouse embryonal carcinoma cell line | miR-124 promotes neuronal differentiation | REST | |||
| Mouse embryonic NSCs, | miR-137 OE inhibits NSC proliferation and accelerates neuronal differentiation | TLX (via LSD1) | |||
Putative impact of miRNAs on neuronal migration and neuronal morphogenesis in the context of adult neurogenesis.
| MicroRNA | Main model system | Observed main effect | miRNA regulator | Target mRNA | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat primary embryonic hippocampal neurons | miR-124 increases axonal and dendrite complexity | ||||
| Rat primary neonatal cortical neurons | CREB induces miR-132 expression downstream of BDNF, miR-132 promotes neurite outgrowth | CREB | p250Gap ( | ||
| Rat primary neonatal cortical neurons | miR-132 and MECP2 form a feedback mechanism via BDNF | BDNF via CREB | |||
| Rat primary neonatal hippocampal neurons | miR-132 promotes dendrite growth and spine maturation | p250Gap ( | |||
| Rat primary embryonic cortical/hippocampal neurons | miR-134 decreases size of dendritic spines | BDNF (indirect effect) | |||
| MECP2 | |||||
| Rat primary embryonic cortical/hippocampal neurons | miR-379-410 expression is regulated by neuronal activity via MEF2; miR-134 promotes dendrite outgrowth | MEF2 | |||
| Rat primary embryonic cortical/hippocampal neurons | miR-138 decreases size of dendritic spines | ||||
FIGURE 3MicroRNAs interact with transcription factors and epigenetic regulators to control aNSC proliferation and differentiation. (A) The transcriptional repressor REST serves as regulatory hub for several miRNAs, including pro-neural miR-9 and miR-124. REST represses expression of miR-9 and miR-124, which in turn interfere with the activity of the Rest complex by targeting Rest or its cofactors CoRest and Scp1. (B) Another transcription factor interacting with miRNAs in the context of NSC self-renewal and differentiation is TLX. TLX has a direct repressive effect on miR-9 expression and also inhibits expression of miR-137 via recruiting the histone demethylase LSD1. The activity of TLX itself is regulated by miR-9 as well as let-7, which both target Tlx, and miR-137, which targets Lsd1. (C–D) miRNAs often interact with epigenetic regulators, such as mediators of DNA methylation and histone modifiers. (C) Expression of miR-184 and miR-195 is suppressed by binding of the methyl-CpG-binding protein MBD1 to their genomic loci. miRNA-195, in turn, binds to Mbd1 mRNA forming a negative feedback loop, while miR-184 targets Numbl. (D) MECP2 cooperates with the neural progenitor transcription factor SOX2 to repress miR-137 expression. miRNA-137 may regulate global gene transcription through repressing the expression of histone modifiers, i.e., EZH2, which induces repressive H3K27 trimethylation (me3) marks, and LSD1, which erases activating H3K4me3 marks. LSD1 and MECP2 are also recruited by the REST/CoREST complex, thus forming another node through which the miRNAs discussed here may cross talk with each other. For sake of simplicity, these interactions were not depicted here. For a detailed review on the cross talk between miRNAs and epigenetic regulators, see Jobe et al. (2012).
FIGURE 4miRNAs modulating dendrite morphogenesis converge by targeting components of the actin remodeling complex and cross talk with each other via neuronal activity-dependent gene regulatory networks. (A) miRNA-124, miR-132, miR-134, and miR-138 have divergent effects on dendrite morphogenesis by targeting different components of the actin remodeling pathway. miRNA-124 and miR-134 reduce the activity of RAC1/LIMK1 signaling, whereby miR-124 targets RhoG and miR-134 targets Limk1. miRNA-132, in contrast, increases RAC1/LIMK1 activity by inhibiting p250Gap-mediated repression of RAC1. miRNA-138 increases Gα12/13 palmitoylation and downstream RhoA signaling by targeting the mRNA coding for the depalmitoylation enzyme APT1. An additional target of miR-134 is the translational repressor PUM2 (Pumilio2) through which miR-134 promotes overall dendritogenesis. (B) Many of the miRNAs modulating dendrite morphogenesis engage in regulatory circuits with transcription regulators that respond to neuronal activity. One such regulatory circuit is formed around miR-132 (highlighted in blue), whose expression is induced by CREB downstream of neuronal activity. miRNA-132 itself may influence CREB activation via interfering with MECP2-induced expression of Bdnf, which forms a positive feedback loop with CREB. The regulation of miR-134 expression (in orange) seems to be more complex: miR-134 expression was found to be induced by MEF2 downstream of neuronal activity and inhibited by MECP2, which interferes with pri-miR-134 processing. miRNA-134, in turn, targets Creb and may thereby provide a negative feedback signal for activity-induced gene expression and also influence miR-132 transcription. Another regulatory hub involves miR-15a (in green), the expression of which is inhibited by MECP2. miRNA-15a targets Bdnf mRNA, thereby providing an alternative route through which MECP2 promotes Bdnf expression. MECP2 further represses expression of miR-137 by cooperating with SOX2. miRNA-137 inhibits neuronal maturation and dendrite morphogenesis by targeting the ubiquitin ligase MIB1.