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microRNA-184 Induces a Commitment Switch to Epidermal Differentiation
Author(s) -
Sara Nagosa,
Friederike Leesch,
Daria Putin,
Swarnabh Bhattacharya,
Anna Altshuler,
Laura Serror,
Aya Amitai-Lange,
Waseem Nasser,
Édith Aberdam,
Matthieu Rouleau,
Sudhir Gopal Tattikota,
Matthew N. Poy,
Daniel Aberdam,
Ruby ShalomFeuerstein
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
stem cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.207
H-Index - 76
ISSN - 2213-6711
DOI - 10.1016/j.stemcr.2017.10.030
Subject(s) - biology , microrna , microbiology and biotechnology , notch signaling pathway , cellular differentiation , stem cell , progenitor cell , mutation , gene silencing , cancer research , genetics , signal transduction , gene
miR-184 is a highly evolutionary conserved microRNA (miRNA) from fly to human. The importance of miR-184 was underscored by the discovery that point mutations in miR-184 gene led to corneal/lens blinding disease. However, miR-184-related function in vivo remained unclear. Here, we report that the miR-184 knockout mouse model displayed increased p63 expression in line with epidermal hyperplasia, while forced expression of miR-184 by stem/progenitor cells enhanced the Notch pathway and induced epidermal hypoplasia. In line, miR-184 reduced clonogenicity and accelerated differentiation of human epidermal cells. We showed that by directly repressing cytokeratin 15 (K15) and FIH1, miR-184 induces Notch activation and epidermal differentiation. The disease-causing miR-184 C57U mutant failed to repress K15 and FIH1 and to induce Notch activation, suggesting a loss-of-function mechanism. Altogether, we propose that, by targeting K15 and FIH1, miR-184 regulates the transition from proliferation to early differentiation, while mis-expression or mutation in miR-184 results in impaired homeostasis.

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