Differential Sensitivity of Target Genes to Translational Repression by miR-17~92

  • Hyun Yong Jin
  • , Hiroyo Oda
  • , Pengda Chen
  • , Chao Yang
  • , Xiaojuan Zhou
  • , Seung Goo Kang
  • , Elizabeth Valentine
  • , Jennifer Kefauver
  • , Lujian Liao
  • , Yaoyang Zhang
  • , Alicia Gonzalez-Martin
  • , Jovan Shepherd
  • , Gareth J. Morgan
  • , Tony S. Mondala
  • , Steven R. Head
  • , Pyeung Hyeun Kim
  • , Nengming Xiao
  • , Guo Fu
  • , Wen Hsien Liu
  • , Jiahuai Han
  • James R. Williamson, Changchun Xiao*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are thought to exert their functions by modulating the expression of hundreds of target genes and each to a small degree, but it remains unclear how small changes in hundreds of target genes are translated into the specific function of a miRNA. Here, we conducted an integrated analysis of transcriptome and translatome of primary B cells from mutant mice expressing miR-17~92 at three different levels to address this issue. We found that target genes exhibit differential sensitivity to miRNA suppression and that only a small fraction of target genes are actually suppressed by a given concentration of miRNA under physiological conditions. Transgenic expression and deletion of the same miRNA gene regulate largely distinct sets of target genes. miR-17~92 controls target gene expression mainly through translational repression and 5’UTR plays an important role in regulating target gene sensitivity to miRNA suppression. These findings provide molecular insights into a model in which miRNAs exert their specific functions through a small number of key target genes.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1006623
JournalPLoS Genetics
Volume13
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2017
Externally publishedYes

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