Author:
Vorlova Sandra,Blahetek Gina,Barbieri Ruggero,Kerstan Yvonne,Rosa Annabelle,Bundalo Maja,Egg Manuel,Butt Elke,Henke Erik,Dölken Lars,Houben Roland,Schilling Bastian,Fischer Utz,Erhard Florian,Zernecke Alma
Abstract
AbstractActivation of intronic polyadenylation signals results in premature cleavage and polyadenylation (PCPA). The majority of mammalian miRNAs are also located within intronic regions of protein-coding genes and are transcriptionally co-expressed with their host genes. Here we show that U1-dependent PCPA by telescripting dysregulates miRNA biogenesis. When U1 is reduced, miR-211 levels are decreased as a direct consequence of activation of a newly identified alternative intronic polyadenylation signal located upstream of miR-211 within its host gene TRPM1. Various melanoma cell lines revealed decreased U1 levels and a shift from full-length to truncated TRPM1 isoforms with concomitant decreased miR-211 expression. Modulation of TRPM1 alternative polyadenylation (APA) by morpholino oligonucleotides inhibits and potentially restores miR-211 expression to endogenous levels. This mechanism of intronic PCPA and its effects on miRNA biogenesis represents a previously unrecognized layer of gene expression regulation suitable for therapeutic modulation.Graphical Abstract
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory