| Literature DB >> 35812116 |
Aileen I Pogue1, Vivian R Jaber2, Nathan M Sharfman2, Yuhai Zhao2,3, Walter J Lukiw1,2,4,5.
Abstract
Microbiome-derived Gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) has been shown by multiple laboratories to reside within Alzheimer's disease (AD)-affected neocortical and hippocampal neurons. LPS and other pro-inflammatory stressors strongly induce a defined set of NF-kB (p50/p65)-sensitive human microRNAs, including a brain-enriched Homo sapien microRNA-30b-5p (hsa-miRNA-30b-5p; miRNA-30b). Here we provide evidence that this neuropathology-associated miRNA, known to be upregulated in AD brain and LPS-stressed human neuronal-glial (HNG) cells in primary culture targets the neurofilament light (NF-L) chain mRNA 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR), which is conducive to the post-transcriptional downregulation of NF-L expression observed within both AD and LPS-treated HNG cells. A deficiency of NF-L is associated with consequent atrophy of the neuronal cytoskeleton and the disruption of synaptic organization. Interestingly, miRNA-30b has previously been shown to be highly expressed in amyloid-beta (Aβ) peptide-treated animal and cell models, and Aβ peptides promote LPS entry into neurons. Increased miRNA-30b expression induces neuronal injury, neuron loss, neuronal inflammation, impairment of synaptic transmission, and synaptic failure in neurodegenerative disease and transgenic murine models. This gut microbiota-derived LPS-NF-kB-miRNA-30b-NF-L pathological signaling network: (i) underscores a positive pathological link between the LPS of gastrointestinal (GI)-tract microbes and the inflammatory neuropathology, disordered cytoskeleton, and disrupted synaptic signaling of the AD brain and stressed brain cells; and (ii) is the first example of a microbiome-derived neurotoxic glycolipid having significant detrimental miRNA-30b-mediated actions on the expression of NF-L, an abundant neuron-specific filament protein known to be important in the maintenance of neuronal cell shape, axonal caliber, and synaptic homeostasis.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease (AD); NF-kB (p50/p65); lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin); miRNA-30b-5p; microbiome and dysbiosis; neurofilament; neurofilament light (NF-L)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35812116 PMCID: PMC9263091 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.900048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Figure 1Analysis of the hsa-miRNA-30b-5p (miRNA-30b) interaction with the Homo sapien NF-L 3'-UTR; (A) representation of the nucleotide complementarity between the 22 nucleotide (nt) hsa-miR-30b-5p (highlighted in green; encoded at the miRNA-30 gene cluster on human chromosome (chr) 8q24.22; https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=MIR30B) and nt position 266–287 of the NF-L mRNA 3'-UTR non-coding region (highlighted in yellow; encoded at human chr 8p21.1; https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=NEFL); the microRNA target prediction database (miRDB; http://mirdb.org/cgi-bin/targetdetail.cgi?targetID=2099169; last accessed April 24, 2022) for miRNA-30b and NF-L (NEFL; NCBI Gene ID 4747; GenBank Accession NM_006158) indicates a very high miRNA-mRNA target score of 84 and a strong 10 nt ‘seed' sequence location at 278-287 nt of the NF-L 3'-UTR [see also “(B)” below]; (B) the NF-L 3'-UTR gene sequence; the inverted red arrow indicates the start of the NF-L 3'-UTR non-coding sequence; last upward pointing red arrow is the end of the NF-L 3'-UTR; note that additional adenosine groups are present in the mature NF-L mRNA (and 3' end of the NF-L 3'-UTR); (C) the NF-L-mRNA-3′-UTR expression vector luciferase reporter assay (pLight Switch-3′UTR; Cat#S810535; Switchgear Genomics, Palo Alto CA); in this vector, the entire 1,985 nucleotide NF-L 3′-UTR was ligated into the unique Nhe1-Xho1site; not drawn to scale; (D) human neuronal-glial (HNG) cells, 2 weeks in primary culture; neurons (red stain; λmax = 690 nm), DAPI (blue nuclear stain; λmax = 470 nm) and glial fibrillary associated protein (GFAP; glial-specific green stain; λmax = 520 nm); the HNG cell culture is about 60% confluent and at 2 weeks of culture contains about 70% neurons and 30% astroglia (7, 14, 18, 39, 40, 49); human neurons do not culture well in the absence of glia; neurons also show both extensive cytoarchitecture and display electrical activity (unpublished; Lonza Research and Development, Walkersville MD, USA); 40X magnification; HNG cells transfected with the NF-L-mRNA-3′-UTR expression vector luciferase reporter were treated exogenously with LPS (20 ng/ml cell culture medium, 48 hr), a stabilized miRNA-30b, a scrambled control miRNA-30b (miRNA-30b-sc) or control miRNA-183; see (14, 18, 39, 49) and text for further details on all reagents and methods used in these experiments; (E) compared to control, HNG cells transfected with a scrambled (sc) control pLightSwitch-3'-UTR vector, the NF-L-mRNA-3′-UTR vector exhibited decreased luciferase signal to a mean of 0.18-fold of controls in the presence of exogenous LPS and 0.11 in the presence of miRNA-30b; this same vector exhibited no change in relative luciferase yield in the presence of a control miRNA-30b-sc or miRNA-183; for each experiment (using different batches of HNG cells) a control luciferase signal was generated that included separate controls with each analysis; in addition a control vector β-actin-3′-UTR showed no significant effects on the relative luciferase signal yield after treatment with either miRNA-183 or miRNA-30b (data not shown); a dashed horizontal line set to 1 is included for ease of comparison; N = 5; *p < 0.01 (ANOVA); values represent mean +/- 1 standard deviation (S.D.); Microsoft Excel Analysis ToolPak, Excel for Microsoft 365; https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/use-the-analysis-toolpak-to-perform-complex-data-analysis-6c67ccf0-f4a9-487c-8dec-bdb5a2cefab6. The results suggest a physiologically relevant miRNA-30b-NF-L-mRNA-3′-UTR interaction and a miRNA-30b-mediated downregulation of NF-L expression in HNG cells. This pathogenic interaction may be related to the downregulation of other immune, inflammatory, and synaptic system genes by upregulated miRNAs in the CNS resulting in a deficit in cytoskeletal and synaptic organization and trans-synaptic signaling (7, 21, 26, 27, 31, 32, 36, 38–40, 50).
Figure 2LPS, present in brain cells affected with AD, has an inhibitory effect on NF-L expression; a human microbiome-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-NF-kB-miRNA-30b-NF-L pathological signaling pathway may be in part responsible for driving altered cytoskeletal dynamics, neuronal atrophy and altered trans-synaptic signaling in stressed human neuronal-glial (HNG) cells in primary culture and in Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain. LPSs are neurotoxic glycolipids derived from the outer cell wall of non-capsulated Gram-negative bacteria; normally they contribute to the integrity of the outer cell wall membrane and protect the cell against the action of bile salts and lipophilic antibiotics (50, 52, 53). Both microbial infection and LPS are strong inducers of NF-kB signaling in neurons and other human cell types. miRNA-30b is under transcriptional control by NF-kB, and the neuron-specific NF-L chain mRNA-3'-UTR is a target for miRNA-30b. Other miRNAs may be involved (see Supplementary File 1). Disruption and insufficiency of NF-L abundance within the neuron are in part responsible for disturbances in neuronal cytoarchitecture, atrophy, and synaptic aberrations as is observed in stressed human brain cells and in AD-affected neocortex.