Discovery of novel microRNA mimic repressors of ribosome biogenesis

Author:

Bryant Carson J1ORCID,McCool Mason A1ORCID,Rosado González Gabriela T1,Abriola Laura2ORCID,Surovtseva Yulia V2ORCID,Baserga Susan J134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale School of Medicine , New Haven , CT , 06520, USA

2. Yale Center for Molecular Discovery, Yale University , West Haven , CT , 06516, USA

3. Department of Genetics, Yale School of Medicine , New Haven , CT , 06520, USA

4. Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale School of Medicine , New Haven , CT , 06520, USA

Abstract

Abstract While microRNAs and other non-coding RNAs are the next frontier of novel regulators of mammalian ribosome biogenesis (RB), a systematic exploration of microRNA-mediated RB regulation has not yet been undertaken. We carried out a high-content screen in MCF10A cells for changes in nucleolar number using a library of 2603 mature human microRNA mimics. Following a secondary screen for nucleolar rRNA biogenesis inhibition, we identified 72 novel microRNA negative regulators of RB after stringent hit calling. Hits included 27 well-conserved microRNAs present in MirGeneDB, and were enriched for mRNA targets encoding proteins with nucleolar localization or functions in cell cycle regulation. Rigorous selection and validation of a subset of 15 microRNA hits unexpectedly revealed that most of them caused dysregulated pre-rRNA processing, elucidating a novel role for microRNAs in RB regulation. Almost all hits impaired global protein synthesis and upregulated CDKN1A (p21) levels, while causing diverse effects on RNA Polymerase 1 (RNAP1) transcription and TP53 protein levels. We provide evidence that the MIR-28 siblings, hsa-miR-28-5p and hsa-miR-708-5p, potently target the ribosomal protein mRNA RPS28 via tandem primate-specific 3′ UTR binding sites, causing a severe pre-18S pre-rRNA processing defect. Our work illuminates novel microRNA attenuators of RB, forging a promising new path for microRNA mimic chemotherapeutics.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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