Author:
Yuan Ye,Liu Bing,Xie Peng,Zhang Michael Q.,Li Yanda,Xie Zhen,Wang Xiaowo
Abstract
Competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs) cross-regulate each other at the posttranscriptional level by titrating shared microRNAs (miRNAs). Here, we established a computational model to quantitatively describe a minimum ceRNA network and experimentally validated our model predictions in cultured human cells by using synthetic gene circuits. We demonstrated that the range and strength of ceRNA regulation are largely determined by the relative abundance and the binding strength of miRNA and ceRNAs. We found that a nonreciprocal competing effect between partially and perfectly complementary targets is mainly due to different miRNA loss rates in these two types of regulations. Furthermore, we showed that miRNA-like off targets with high expression levels and strong binding sites significantly diminish the RNA interference efficiency, but the effect caused by high expression levels could be compensated by introducing more small interference RNAs (siRNAs). Thus, our results provided a quantitative understanding of ceRNA cross-regulation via shared miRNA and implied an siRNA design strategy to reduce the siRNA off-target effect in mammalian cells.
Funder
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China
Outstanding Tutors for doctoral dissertations of S T project in Beijing
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
100 articles.
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