Author:
Kobayashi Mariko,Benakis Corinne,Anderson Corey,Moore Michael J.,Poon Carrie,Uekawa Ken,Dyke Jonathan P.,Fak John J.,Mele Aldo,Park Christopher Y.,Zhou Ping,Anrather Josef,Iadecola Costantino,Darnell Robert B.
Abstract
ABSTRACTPost-transcriptional regulation by miRNAs is essential for complex molecular responses to physiological insult and disease. Although many disease-associated miRNAs are known, their global targets and culminating network effects on pathophysiology remain poorly understood. We applied AGO CLIP to systematically elucidate altered miRNA-target interactions in brain following ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. Among 1,190 identified, most prominent was the cumulative loss of target regulation by miR-29 family members. Integration of translational and time-course RNA profiles revealed a dynamic mode of miR-29 target de-regulation, led by acute translational activation and later increase in RNA levels, allowing rapid proteomic changes to take effect. These functional regulatory events rely on canonical and non-canonical miR-29 binding and engage glutamate reuptake signals to control local glutamate levels. These results uncover a miRNA target network that acts acutely to maintain brain homeostasis after ischemic stroke.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory