MicroRNA-934 is a novel primate-specific small non-coding RNA with neurogenic function during early development

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Abstract

Integrating differential RNA and miRNA expression during neuronal lineage induction of human embryonic stem cells we identified miR-934, a primate-specific miRNA that displays a stage-specific expression pattern during progenitor expansion and early neuron generation. We demonstrate the biological relevance of this finding by comparison with data from early to mid-gestation human cortical tissue. Further we find that miR-934 directly controls progenitor to neuroblast transition and impacts on neurite growth of newborn neurons. In agreement, miR-934 targets are involved in progenitor proliferation and neuronal differentiation whilst miR-934 inhibition results in profound global transcriptome changes associated with neurogenesis, axonogenesis, neuronal migration and neurotransmission. Interestingly, miR-934 inhibition affects the expression of genes associated with the subplate zone, a transient compartment most prominent in primates that emerges during early corticogenesis. Our data suggest that mir-934 is a novel regulator of early human neurogenesis with potential implications for a species-specific evolutionary role in brain function.

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Prodromidou, K., Vlachos, I. S., Gaitanou, M., Kouroupi, G., Hatzigeorgiou, A. G., & Matsas, R. (2020). MicroRNA-934 is a novel primate-specific small non-coding RNA with neurogenic function during early development. ELife, 9, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.50561

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