A neuronal transcriptome response involving stress pathways is buffered by neuronal micrornas

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Abstract

A single microRNA (miRNA) can inhibit a large number of mRNA transcripts. This widespread regulatoryfunction has been experimentally demonstrated for a number of miRNAs. However, even when a multitude of targets is confirmed, function of a miRNA is frequently interpreted through a prism of a handful arbitrarily selected "interesting" targets. In this work wefirst show that hundredsoftranscripts withtarget sites fortwomiRNAs expressed endogenously in neurons, miR-124 and miR-434-3p, are coordinately upregulated in a variety of neuronal stresses. This creates a landscape where these two miRNAs can exert their widespread inhibitory potential on stress-induced transcripts. Next, we experimentally demonstrate that overexpression of these two miRNAs indeed significantly inhibits expression of hundreds of stress-induced transcripts, thus confirming that these transcripts are enriched in true targets of examined miRNAs. A number of miRNAs were previously shown to have important roles in the regulation of stress responses, and our results suggest that these roles should be understood in light of a wide spread activation of miRNA targets during stresses. Importantly, a popular cationic lipid transfection reagent triggers such induction of miRNA targets. Therefore, when a transfection paradigm is employed to study miRNA function, the results of such studies should be interpreted with consideration for the inadvertent induction of miRNA targets. © 2012 Manakov, Morton, Enright and Grant.

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Manakov, S. A., Morton, A., Enright, A. J., & Grant, S. G. N. (2012). A neuronal transcriptome response involving stress pathways is buffered by neuronal micrornas. Frontiers in Neuroscience, (OCT). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2012.00156

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