Human genetics and neuropathology suggest a link between miR-218 and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis pathophysiology
Publication date
2019-12-18
Authors
Reichenstein, Irit
Eitan, Chen
Diaz-Garcia, Sandra
Haim, Guy
Magen, Iddo
Siany, Aviad
Hoye, Mariah L
Rivkin, Natali
Olender, Tsviya
Toth, Beata
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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taverne
Abstract
Motor neuron-specific microRNA-218 (miR-218) has recently received attention because of its roles in mouse development. However, miR-218 relevance to human motor neuron disease was not yet explored. Here, we demonstrate by neuropathology that miR-218 is abundant in healthy human motor neurons. However, in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) motor neurons, miR-218 is down-regulated and its mRNA targets are reciprocally up-regulated (derepressed). We further identify the potassium channel Kv10.1 as a new miR-218 direct target that controls neuronal activity. In addition, we screened thousands of ALS genomes and identified six rare variants in the human miR-218-2 sequence. miR-218 gene variants fail to regulate neuron activity, suggesting the importance of this small endogenous RNA for neuronal robustness. The underlying mechanisms involve inhibition of miR-218 biogenesis and reduced processing by DICER. Therefore, miR-218 activity in motor neurons may be susceptible to failure in human ALS, suggesting that miR-218 may be a potential therapeutic target in motor neuron disease.
Keywords
Taverne, Journal Article
Citation
Reichenstein, I, Eitan, C, Diaz-Garcia, S, Haim, G, Magen, I, Siany, A, Hoye, M L, Rivkin, N, Olender, T, Toth, B, Ravid, R, Mandelbaum, A D, Yanowski, E, Liang, J, Rymer, J K, Levy, R, Beck, G, Ainbinder, E, Farhan, S M K, Lennox, K A, Bode, N M, Behlke, M A, Möller, T, Saxena, S, Moreno, C A M, Costaguta, G, van Eijk, K R, Phatnani, H, Al-Chalabi, A, Başak, A N, van den Berg, L H, Hardiman, O, Landers, J E, Mora, J S, Morrison, K E, Shaw, P J, Veldink, J H, Pfaff, S L, Yizhar, O, Gross, C, Brown, R H, Ravits, J M, Harms, M B, Miller, T M & Hornstein, E 2019, 'Human genetics and neuropathology suggest a link between miR-218 and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis pathophysiology', Science Translational Medicine, vol. 11, no. 523, eaav5264, pp. 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aav5264