Noncoding rnas and midbrain da neurons: Novel molecular mechanisms and therapeutic targets in health and disease

Publication date

2020-09-01

Authors

Pascale, Emilia
Divisato, Giuseppina
Palladino, Renata
Auriemma, Margherita
Ngalya, Edward Faustine
Caiazzo, MassimilianoORCID 0009-0003-1487-8463ISNI 0000000492840057

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Midbrain dopamine neurons have crucial functions in motor and emotional control and their degeneration leads to several neurological dysfunctions such as Parkinson’s disease, addiction, depression, schizophrenia, and others. Despite advances in the understanding of specific altered proteins and coding genes, little is known about cumulative changes in the transcriptional landscape of noncoding genes in midbrain dopamine neurons. Noncoding RNAs—specifically microRNAs and long noncoding RNAs—are emerging as crucial post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression in the brain. The identification of noncoding RNA networks underlying all stages of dopamine neuron development and plasticity is an essential step to deeply understand their physiological role and also their involvement in the etiology of dopaminergic diseases. Here, we provide an update about noncoding RNAs involved in dopaminergic development and metabolism, and the related evidence of these biomolecules for applications in potential treatments for dopaminergic neurodegeneration.

Keywords

Direct cell conversion or reprogramming, Dopamine neurons, Long noncoding RNA, MicroRNA, Parkinson’s disease, RNA therapeutics, Biochemistry, Molecular Biology

Citation

Pascale, E, Divisato, G, Palladino, R, Auriemma, M, Ngalya, E F & Caiazzo, M 2020, 'Noncoding rnas and midbrain da neurons : Novel molecular mechanisms and therapeutic targets in health and disease', Biomolecules, vol. 10, no. 9, 1269. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10091269