- Main
Human genetics and neuropathology suggest a link between miR-218 and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis pathophysiology.
- Reichenstein, Irit;
- Eitan, Chen;
- Diaz-Garcia, Sandra;
- Haim, Guy;
- Magen, Iddo;
- Siany, Aviad;
- Hoye, Mariah;
- Rivkin, Natali;
- Olender, Tsviya;
- Toth, Beata;
- Ravid, Revital;
- Mandelbaum, Amitai;
- Yanowski, Eran;
- Liang, Jing;
- Rymer, Jeffrey;
- Levy, Rivka;
- Beck, Gilad;
- Ainbinder, Elena;
- Farhan, Sali;
- Lennox, Kimberly;
- Bode, Nicole;
- Behlke, Mark;
- Möller, Thomas;
- Saxena, Smita;
- Moreno, Cristiane;
- Costaguta, Giancarlo;
- van Eijk, Kristel;
- Phatnani, Hemali;
- Al-Chalabi, Ammar;
- Başak, A;
- van den Berg, Leonard;
- Hardiman, Orla;
- Landers, John;
- Mora, Jesus;
- Morrison, Karen;
- Shaw, Pamela;
- Veldink, Jan;
- Pfaff, Samuel;
- Yizhar, Ofer;
- Gross, Christina;
- Brown, Robert;
- Ravits, John;
- Harms, Matthew;
- Miller, Timothy;
- Hornstein, Eran
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aav5264Abstract
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.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-