Profiling of NGF regulated microRNAs in PC12 cells identifies potential new mediators of neuronal differentiation, plasticity and neuroprotection

Gruppo di Ricerca: 
Nasi
Attach English: 

Neurotrophins (NGF, BDNF, NT3, NT4/5) regulate neuronal development, survival, dendritic

and axonal growth, synaptic transmission and long-term potentiation. Alterations in their

function are presumably involved in mood disorders and neurodegenerative diseases such

as Alzheimers. microRNAs (miRNAs) - small non-coding RNAs that control the translation of

target messenger RNAs - were shown to regulate critical aspects of neuronal development,

plasticity and disease. To elucidate miRNA regulation by neurotrophins, we profiled - by

microarrays and Real Time PCR - miRNA expression in PC12 cells, which differentiate

into mature neurons when exposed to NGF. miRNA expression was measured at various

times of NGF treatment. The expression of only a small number of miRNAs was clearly

modulated by NGF, some appearing to be induced (e.g. miR-21, miR-207, miR-212), others

repressed (e.g. miR-93, miR-29c, miR-30c). Notably, the promoter regions of miR-207 and

miR-212 have CREB binding sites - a transcription factor representing a major mediator of

neurotrophin signalling, indicating that they are direct NGF signalling mediators. Pathway

enrichment analysis on presumptive targets suggests that NGF modulated miRNAs may

play roles in neuronal signaling and neuronal degeneration. In particular some of them may

be involved in cell survival following NGF deprivation. The overexpression of one of those

miRNAs permitted us to investigate the effect of the overexpression on the neural survival and the amyloidogenic pathway. In conclusion, we have identified a set of microRNAs whose expression is modulated by NGF and may be implicated in neuronal differentiation and plasticity.

Anno del Convegno: 
2012

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