MicroRNA-124 protects against focal cerebral ischemia via mechanisms involving Usp14-dependent REST degradation |
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Authors: | Thorsten R. Doeppner Maria Doehring Eva Bretschneider Anil Zechariah Britta Kaltwasser Barbara Müller Jan C. Koch Mathias Bähr Dirk M. Hermann Uwe Michel |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, University Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstr. 55, 45147, Essen, Germany 2. S1/S2 Laboratory, Department of Neurology, University of Goettingen, Waldweg 33, 37073, Goettingen, Germany 3. DFG Research Center for the Molecular Physiology of the Brain (CMPB), Goettingen, Germany
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Abstract: | MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are highly conserved non-coding RNAs modulating gene expression via mRNA binding. Recent work suggests an involvement of miRNAs in cardiovascular diseases including stroke. As such, the brain-abundant miR-124 and its transcriptional repressor RE1-silencing transcription factor (REST) do not only have elementary roles in the developing and the adult brain, but also alter expression upon cerebral ischemia. However, the therapeutic potential of miR-124 against stroke and the mechanisms involved remain elusive. Here, we analyzed the therapeutic potential of ectopic miR-124 against stroke and its underlying mechanisms with regard to the interaction between miR-124 and REST. Our results show that viral vector-mediated miR-124 delivery increased the resistance of cultured oxygen-glucose-deprived cortical neurons in vitro and reduced brain injury as well as functional impairment in mice submitted to middle cerebral artery occlusion. Likewise, miR-124 induced enhanced neurovascular remodeling leading to increased angioneurogenesis 8 weeks post-stroke. While REST abundance increased upon stroke, the increase was prevented by miR-124 despite a so far unknown negative feedback loop between miR-124 and REST. Rather, miR-124 decreased the expression of the deubiquitinating enzyme Usp14, which has two conserved miR-124-binding sites in the 3′UTR of its mRNA, and thereby mediated reduced REST levels. The down-regulation of REST by miR-124 was also mimicked by the Usp14 inhibitor IU-1, suggesting that miR-124 promotes neuronal survival under ischemic conditions via Usp14-dependent REST degradation. Ectopic miR-124 expression, therefore, appears as an attractive and novel tool in stroke treatment, mediating neuroprotection via a hitherto unknown mechanism that involves Usp14-dependent REST degradation. |
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