Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) can notably control many targets each and regulate entire cellular pathways, but whether miRNAs can regulate complete neurotransmission processes is largely unknown. Here, we report that miRNAs with complementary sequence motifs to the key genes involved in acetylcholine (ACh) synthesis and/or packaging show massive overlap with those regulating ACh degradation. To address this topic, we first searched for miRNAs that could target the 3′-untranslated regions of the choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) gene that controls ACh synthesis; the vesicular ACh transporter (VAChT), encoded from an intron in the ChAT gene and the ACh hydrolyzing genes acetyl- and/or butyrylcholinesterase (AChE, BChE). Intriguingly, we found that many of the miRNAs targeting these genes are primate-specific, and that changes in their levels associate with inflammation, anxiety, brain damage, cardiac, neurodegenerative, or pain-related syndromes. To validate the in vivo relevance of this dual interaction, we selected the evolutionarily conserved miR-186, which targets both the stress-inducible soluble “readthrough” variant AChE-R and the major peripheral cholinesterase BChE. We exposed mice to predator scent stress and searched for potential associations between consequent changes in their miR-186, AChE-R, and BChE levels. Both intestinal miR-186 as well as BChE and AChE-R activities were conspicuously elevated 1 week post-exposure, highlighting the previously unknown involvement of miR-186 and BChE in psychological stress responses. Overlapping miRNA regulation emerges from our findings as a recently evolved surveillance mechanism over cholinergic neurotransmission in health and disease; and the corresponding miRNA details and disease relevance may serve as a useful resource for studying the molecular mechanisms underlying this surveillance.

Highlights

  • MicroRNAs are small, 20–25 nucleotides long, noncoding RNA molecules, each of which can predictably target many protein-coding messenger RNA transcripts to silence them post-transcriptionally

  • One would predict that the synthesis, packaging in neuronal vesicles and destruction or reuptake of a certain neurotransmitter should be co-regulated; this, in turn implies that some miRNAs may co-suppress two or more of the messenger RNA (mRNA) transcripts involved in regulating the levels of certain neurotransmitters, and that modified expression of such miRNAs might be involved in diseases associated with impaired regulation of this neurotransmission pathway

  • Based on this working hypothesis, we studied miRNA-mediated regulation of mRNA transcripts involved in the synthesis, vesicle packaging, and destruction of acetylcholine (ACh)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, 20–25 nucleotides long, noncoding RNA molecules, each of which can predictably target many protein-coding messenger RNA (mRNA) transcripts to silence them post-transcriptionally. The BChE gene, completing the series of regions to be analyzed, has a different 3 -UTR with lower G, C-content (Soreq and Seidman, 2001), demonstrating sequence differences We identified numerous overlaps between those CholinomiRs controlling ACh packaging and its synthesis; suggesting that miRNAs play an important role in selectively co-regulating cholinergic signaling by adapting the rates and efficacy of ACh packaging and destruction Changes in these CholinomiRs, of which many are primate-specific, were further reported by others in inflammation and anxiety, brain damage, pain, cardiac, and neurodegenerative diseases, all of which are known for cholinergic signaling impairments. The detailed lists of these miRNAs and their potential involvements with different diseases may be a valuable resource for researchers interested in both basic and translational aspects of key neuroinflammation and pain-related disorders

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
DISCUSSION
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