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miR-144/451 inhibits c-Myc to promote erythroid differentiation.

FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2020-12-16)
Lei Xu, Fan Wu, Lei Yang, Fangfang Wang, Tong Zhang, Xintao Deng, Xiumei Zhang, Xiaoling Yuan, Ying Yan, Yaoyao Li, Zhangping Yang, Duonan Yu
ABSTRACT

Ablation of miR-144/451 disrupts homeostasis of erythropoiesis. Myc, a protooncogenic protein, is essential for erythroblast proliferation but commits rapid downregulation during erythroid maturation. How erythroblasts orchestrate maturation processes through coding and non-coding genes is largely unknown. In this study, we use miR-144/451 knockout mice as in vivo model, G1E, MEL erythroblast lines and erythroblasts from fresh mouse fetal livers as in vitro systems to demonstrate that targeted depletion of miR-144/451 blocks erythroid nuclear condensation and enucleation. This is due, at least in part, to the continued high expression of Myc in erythroblasts when miR-144/451 is absent. Specifically, miR-144/451 directly inhibits Myc in erythroblasts. Loss of miR-144/451 locus derepresses, and thus, increases the expression of Myc. Sustained high levels of Myc in miR-144/451-depleted erythroblasts blocks erythroid differentiation. Moreover, Myc reversely regulates the expression of miR-144/451, forming a positive miR-144/451-Myc feedback to ensure the complete shutoff of Myc during erythropoiesis. Given that erythroid-specific transcription factor GATA1 activates miR-144/451 and inactivates Myc, our findings indicate that GATA1-miR-144/451-Myc network safeguards normal erythroid differentiation. Our findings also demonstrate that disruption of the miR-144/451-Myc crosstalk causes anemia, suggesting that miR-144/451 might be a potential therapeutic target in red cell diseases.

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MISSION® esiRNA, targeting human PSMD4