| Literature DB >> 35237661 |
Courtney F Jungers1, Sergej Djuranovic1.
Abstract
Gene expression is regulated at multiple levels in eukaryotic cells. Regulation at the post-transcriptional level is modulated by various trans-acting factors that bind to specific sequences in the messenger RNA (mRNA). The binding of different trans factors influences various aspects of the mRNA such as degradation rate, translation efficiency, splicing, localization, etc. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short endogenous ncRNAs that combine with the Argonaute to form the microRNA-induced silencing complex (miRISC), which uses base-pair complementation to silence the target transcript. RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) contribute to post-transcriptional control by influencing the mRNA stability and translation upon binding to cis-elements within the mRNA transcript. RBPs have been shown to impact gene expression through influencing the miRISC biogenesis, composition, or miRISC-mRNA target interaction. While there is clear evidence that those interactions between RBPs, miRNAs, miRISC and target mRNAs influence the efficiency of miRISC-mediated gene silencing, the exact mechanism for most of them remains unclear. This review summarizes our current knowledge on gene expression regulation through interactions of miRNAs and RBPs.Entities:
Keywords: RBP binding models; RNA binding protein; mRNA; miRISC; miRISC activity; miRNA
Year: 2022 PMID: 35237661 PMCID: PMC8882679 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2022.832916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
FIGURE 1Canonical miRNA biogenesis in Eukaryotes and the influence of RBPs. (A) shows the miRNA biogenesis in eukaryotes. miRNAs are transcribed in the nucleus by RNA polymerase II (pol II), creating the pri-miRNA, two sequential cleavage reactions follow. The microprocessor consists of Drosha and DGCR8 and performs the first cleavage reaction in the nucleus, creating the pre-miRNA. The pre-miRNA is transported into the cytoplasm through Exportin5 where the second cleavage reaction occurs. Dicer cleaves the terminal loop of the pre-miRNA, creating the miRNA/miRNA* duplex. The miRNAs are incorporated into the Ago protein, forming the minimal effector RNA induced silencing complex (miRISC) and target mRNA sequences. (B) Highlights the modulation of miRNA biogenesis by RBPs. RBPs can bind to the promoter region of certain miRNAs and influence their transcription. RBPs modulate miRNA expression at the pri-miRNA processing level through binding to Drosha and enhance or repress the cleavage. RBPs can also bind to the terminal loop or other sequences in the pri- and pre-miRNAs to influence the cleavage reactions. Additionally, RBPs can bind to DICER and influence this cleavage reaction through modulating DICER expression and availability. Lastly, RBPs can bind to AGO and increase the miRNA loading onto the AGO, increasing the miRISC silencing.
FIGURE 2miRISC-mediated gene repression and the influence from RBPs. While there are conflicting models of miRISC-mediated gene silencing that are not mutually exclusive, scientists have agreed upon a “default” mechanism as all the proposed mechanisms for miRNA-mediated repression involve repression of translation and mRNA decay. As shown in (A), Ago interacts with the PABP complex to promote mRNA deadenylation through recruitment of poly(A) nuclease deadenylation complex subunit 2 (PAN2)-PAN3 and carbon catabolite repressor protein 4 (CCR4)-NOT. Deadenylation promotes decapping by the mRNA-decapping enzyme subunit DCP1-DCP2, making the mRNA vulnerable to degradation by exoribonuclease 1 (XRN1). (B) Highlights the influence RBP binding in the 3′UTR can have on miRISC-mediated gene repression. The RBP can bind up or downstream of the miRISC and either enhance the repression, usually through increasing mRNA degradation, or it could reduce the silencing efficiency of the miRISC.
FIGURE 3Interplay between RBPs and miRNAs on miRISC-mediated gene expression. Panel (A) shows potential models of synergism between RBPs and miRNAs. Upon binding to the mRNA target the RBP can alter the secondary structure and increase the exposure of the miRNA binding site allowing for increased miRISC binding. The RBP could also bind to the miRISC and increase its binding affinity to its target mRNA. (B) Highlights the possible antagonistic mechanism between RBPs and miRNAs. RBP binding to its target could alter the secondary structure, decreasing the miRISC’s access to its binding site. RBPs and miRNA can also compete for the same binding site and the RBP can outcompete and block the miRISC from binding to its site (Loffreda et al., 2015).
Known interactions of RNA-binding proteins and microRNAs.
| Target | RNA-binding protein | microRNA | Action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antagonistic interactions | ||||
| Transcription sites of miRNA | FUS | miR-9, miR-125b, miR-132 | Drosha recruitment lost |
|
| CAT1 3′UTR | HuR | miR-122 | HuR prevents miRISC from binding to target |
|
| COX-2 3′UTR | HuR | miR-16 | Compete for binding site in 3′UTR |
|
| VEGFA 3′UTR | hnRNPL | miR-297, miR-299 | Competes with miRNAs for binding to VEGFA in 3′UTR |
|
| βTrCP1 (coding region) | CRD-BP | miR-183 | Compete for binding in 3′UTR |
|
| Stretches of uridine in 3′UTR | Dnd1 | miR-430 | Dnd1 makes target site inaccessible |
|
| Synergistic interactions | ||||
| RhoB | HuR | miR-19 | Binding of HuR to recruits loaded miRISC |
|
| p27, E2F3 | Pumilio | miR-221/222 | Pumilio binding alters secondary structure, increasing binding accessibility for miRISC |
|
| miR-503 |
| |||
| c-myc | HuR | let-7 | HuR recruits loaded let-7 RISC |
|
| TNF-α | TTP | miR-16 | TTP interacts with Ago to increase miR-16 loading |
|
| Ago | AUF1 | let-7a | Increase let-7 loading onto Ago |
|
| pre-miR18a | hnRNP1 | miR-18a | Increase binding accessibility for miRISC |
|
| pre-let7 | DDX5 | let-7 | Facilitate miRISC loading to let-7 precurser |
|