MicroRNA-142 controls thymocyte proliferation

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Abstract

T-cell development is a spatially and temporally regulated process, orchestrated by well-defined contributions of transcription factors and cytokines. Here, we identify the noncoding RNA miR-142 as an additional regulatory layer within murine thymocyte development and proliferation. MiR-142 deficiency impairs the expression of cell cycle-promoting genes in mature mouse thymocytes and early progenitors, accompanied with increased levels of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1B (Cdkn1b, also known as p27Kip1). By using CRISPR/Cas9 technology to delete the miR-142-3p recognition element in the 3’UTR of cdkn1b, we confirm that this gene is a novel target of miR-142-3p in vivo. Increased Cdkn1b protein expression alone however was insufficient to cause proliferation defects in thymocytes, indicating the existence of additional critical miR-142 targets. Collectively, we establish a key role for miR-142 in the control of early and mature thymocyte proliferation, demonstrating the multifaceted role of a single miRNA on several target genes.

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Mildner, A., Chapnik, E., Varol, D., Aychek, T., Lampl, N., Rivkin, N., … Jung, S. (2017). MicroRNA-142 controls thymocyte proliferation. European Journal of Immunology, 47(7), 1142–1152. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201746987

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