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mRNA Destabilization Is the Dominant Effect of Mammalian MicroRNAs by the Time Substantial Repression Ensues

Author(s)
Rodriguez-Mias, Ricard A.; Shin, Chanseok; Baek, Daehyun; Hsu, Shu-hao; Ghoshal, Kalpana; Villén, Judit; Eichhorn, Stephen William; Guo, Huili; McGeary, Sean Edward; Bartel, David; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate target mRNAs through a combination of translational repression and mRNA destabilization, with mRNA destabilization dominating at steady state in the few contexts examined globally. Here, we extend the global steady-state measurements to additional mammalian contexts and find that regardless of the miRNA, cell type, growth condition, or translational state, mRNA destabilization explains most (66%- > 90%) miRNA-mediated repression. We also determine the relative dynamics of translational repression and mRNA destabilization for endogenous mRNAs as a miRNA is induced. Although translational repression occurs rapidly, its effect is relatively weak, such that by the time consequential repression ensues, the effect of mRNA destabilization dominates. These results imply that consequential miRNA-mediated repression is largely irreversible and provide other insights into the nature of miRNA-mediated regulation. They also simplify future studies, dramatically extending the known contexts and time points for which monitoring mRNA changes captures most of the direct miRNA effects.
Date issued
2014-09
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/116325
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Journal
Molecular Cell
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Eichhorn, Stephen W. et al. “mRNA Destabilization Is the Dominant Effect of Mammalian MicroRNAs by the Time Substantial Repression Ensues.” Molecular Cell 56, 1 (October 2014): 104–115 © 2014 Elsevier Inc
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1097-2765
1097-4164

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