| Literature DB >> 33305319 |
Fabian Kern1, Lena Krammes2, Karin Danz3, Caroline Diener2, Tim Kehl4, Oliver Küchler1, Tobias Fehlmann1, Mustafa Kahraman1, Stefanie Rheinheimer2, Ernesto Aparicio-Puerta1,5,6, Sylvia Wagner3, Nicole Ludwig2,7, Christina Backes1, Hans-Peter Lenhof4, Hagen von Briesen3, Martin Hart2, Andreas Keller1,4,8, Eckart Meese2.
Abstract
MicroRNAs are regulators of gene expression. A wide-spread, yet not validated, assumption is that the targetome of miRNAs is non-randomly distributed across the transcriptome and that targets share functional pathways. We developed a computational and experimental strategy termed high-throughput miRNA interaction reporter assay (HiTmIR) to facilitate the validation of target pathways. First, targets and target pathways are predicted and prioritized by computational means to increase the specificity and positive predictive value. Second, the novel webtool miRTaH facilitates guided designs of reporter assay constructs at scale. Third, automated and standardized reporter assays are performed. We evaluated HiTmIR using miR-34a-5p, for which TNF- and TGFB-signaling, and Parkinson's Disease (PD)-related categories were identified and repeated the pipeline for miR-7-5p. HiTmIR validated 58.9% of the target genes for miR-34a-5p and 46.7% for miR-7-5p. We confirmed the targeting by measuring the endogenous protein levels of targets in a neuronal cell model. The standardized positive and negative targets are collected in the new miRATBase database, representing a resource for training, or benchmarking new target predictors. Applied to 88 target predictors with different confidence scores, TargetScan 7.2 and miRanda outperformed other tools. Our experiments demonstrate the efficiency of HiTmIR and provide evidence for an orchestrated miRNA-gene targeting.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33305319 PMCID: PMC7797041 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkaa1161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971