MiR-125 potentiates early neural specification of human embryonic stem cells

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Abstract

The role of microRNAs (miRNAs) as coordinators of stem cell fate has emerged over the last decade. We have used human embryonic stem cells to identify miRNAs involved in neural lineage commitment induced by the inhibition of TGFβ-like molecule-mediated pathways. Among several candidate miRNAs expressed in the fetal brain, the two isoforms of miR-125 alone were detected in a time window compatible with a role in neural commitment in vitro. Functional analysis indicated that miR-125 isoforms were actively involved in the promotion of pluripotent cell conversion into SOX1-positive neural precursors. miR-125 promotes neural conversion by avoiding the persistence of non-differentiated stem cells and repressing alternative fate choices. This was associated with the regulation by miR-125 of SMAD4, a key regulator of pluripotent stem cell lineage commitment. Activation of miR-125 was directly responsive to the levels of TGFβ-like molecules, placing miR-125 at the core of mechanisms that lead to the irreversible neural lineage commitment of pluripotent stem cells in response to external stimuli. © 2012. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.

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Boissart, C., Nissan, X., Giraud-Triboult, K., Peschanski, M., & Benchoua, A. (2012). MiR-125 potentiates early neural specification of human embryonic stem cells. Development, 139(7), 1247–1257. https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.073627

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