Affiliation:
1. Center for Quantitative Medicine, UConn Health, Farmington, CT, USA
2. The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, Farmington, CT, USA
Abstract
MicroRNAs form a class of short, non-coding RNA molecules which are essential for proper development in tissue-based plants and animals. To help explain their role in gene regulation, a number of mathematical and computational studies have demonstrated the potential canalizing effects of microRNAs. However, such studies have typically focused on the effects of microRNAs on only one or a few target genes. Consequently, it remains unclear how these small-scale effects add up to the experimentally observed developmental outcomes resulting from microRNA perturbation at the whole-genome level. To answer this question, we built a general computational model of cell differentiation to study the effect of microRNAs in genome-scale gene regulatory networks. Our experiments show that in large gene regulatory networks, microRNAs can control differentiation time without significantly changing steady-state gene expression profiles. This temporal regulatory role cannot be naturally replicated using protein-based transcription factors alone. While several microRNAs have been shown to regulate differentiation time
in vivo
, our findings provide a new explanation of how the cumulative molecular actions of individual microRNAs influence genome-scale cellular dynamics. Taken together, these results may help explain why tissue-based organisms exclusively depend on miRNA-mediated regulation, while their more primitive counterparts do not.
Subject
Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology
Cited by
3 articles.
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