Title: Fadya Farid
1The Diverse Functions of MicroRNAs In Animal
Development and Diseases
Fadya Farid
2Outline
- Introduction.
- Functions of miRNAs.
- miRNAs involved in cancer.
- Diseases Associated with changes in the sequence
of the miRNA or the miRNA Target Site. - miRNAs Associated with viral infection.
31. Introduction
- miRNAs are small noncoding RNAs of 22nt that
influence mRNA stability and translation. - The first miRNA, lin-4, was identified in 1993
in a genetic screen for mutants that disrupt the
timing of post-embryonic development in
Caenorhabiditis elegans.
4microMaturationIn Animals, two processing steps
yield mature miRNAs.
- Step 1 generation of 70nt pre-miRNAs from
the longer transcripts (pri-miRNAs) - Step 2 processing or pre-miRNAs into mature
miRNAs.
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62. Functions of miRNAs.
- Loss of All miRNAs They all play important
roles in animal development. - miRNAs as regulators of developmental Timing.
- miRNAs Involved in Signaling Pathways.
- miRNAs in Apoptosis and Metabolism.
- miRNAs Involved in Myogenesis and Cardiogenesis.
- miRNAs in the Brain.
7- From their conservation and expression patterns,
its clear that miRNAs play an important role in
animal development. - HOW?
8Animal without miRNAs Cannot live or reproduce
- For example
- Mice deficient in dicer die at embryonic day7.5
and lack multipotent stem cells
9miRNA Lin-4
- Has two important Functions
- 1. Regulation of Developmental Timing
- lin-4 represses the expression of lin-14 which
encodes a nuclear protein whose concentration
must be reduced for worms to progress from their
first larval stage to the second - 2. Involved in Signaling Pathways
- Affects life span through a major signaling
pathway. - Overexpression of lin-4 resulted in a
prolonged life span, and lin-4 loss-of-function
mutations caused premature death.
10miRNA-14
- Functions in Apoptosis and Metabolism.
- 1.A cell death suppressor.
-
- 2.plays a role in fat metabolism.
- Fly miR-14 mutants are obese and have elevated
levels of triacyglcerides
11miRNAs Involved in Myogenesis and Cardiogenesis
- miR-1 is highly expressed in the muscles of flies
- and the muscles and heart of mice
- Figure 2. Expression of miR-124a and miR-1
- in Zebrafish, Medaka, Mouse, and Fly
- The expression of miR-124a is restricted to
- the brain and the spinal cord in fish and
- mouse or to the ventral nerve cord in the fly.
- The expression of miR-1 is restricted to the
- muscles and the heart in the mouse. The conserved
- sequence and expression of miR-1
- and miR-124a suggests ancient roles in
- muscle and brain development. The fly and
- medaka pictures were generously provided
- by Eric Lai and Brandon Ason, respectively.
123. miRNAs involved in cancer
- Initial Evidence came from a study on Chronic
lymphocytic leukemia. - A region containing miR-15 and miR-16 at
chromosome 13q14 is deleted in most cases - miRNAs located in deleted or amplified regions in
cancer samples have altered expression levels. -
13Figure 3. Mechanisms that Link miRNAs to
Disease There are two possible scenarios (1)
either the expression level of the miRNA changes
due to genomic rearrangements or (2) there is a
gain or loss of an miRNA-target interaction due
to a mutation in a 3UTR or a mutation in the
miRNA.
144. Diseases Associated with changes in the
sequence of the miRNA or the miRNA Target Site
-
- 1. Kaposis sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV)
- SNP in the loop of the pre-mRNA results in
aberrant processing and therefore reduced
mi-RNA production. (miRNA polymorphism) - 2. Tourettes syndrome (TS)
- Results from the mutation in the target
site for miR-189, replacing a GU wobble base
pair with an AU pairing. - 3. Exceptional muscularity of Texel sheep.
- Gain of a target site for miR-1 and miR-206
which are both known to be strongly expressed in
muscles.
155. miRNAs Associated with viral infection
- How does a virus use miRNAs to aid infection?
- One of the miRNAs from the SV40 virus induces
degradation of viral mRNA coding for T-antigens
thus making viral-infected cells less sensitive
to cytotoxic T cells
16Conclusions
- Animals cannot live without miRNAs.
- There is a large repertoire of conserved miRNAs.
- mRNAs contain conserved miRNA target sites.
- Most miRNAs are highly abundant and exhibit
striking tissue-specific expression. - The role of miRNAs in several disease related
processes is now well established.
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