Abstract microRNA (miR)-124 is one of the main drivers of mitotic exit during neurogenesis, which is recapitulated in miR-9/9* and -124 (miR-9/9*-124)-mediated direct neuronal reprogramming. In the reprogramming of various cell types, miR-9/9*-124 induce non-neuronal cell fate erasure before activating the neuronal program. Regardless of the different starting transcriptome landscapes, a core gene regulatory network (GRN) is always targeted by miR-9/9*-124, with cell cycle progression as the most significant pathway. We reason that miR-9/9*-124 can induce cell fate erasure in cancerous cells by repressing similar GRNs, using glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) as a paradigm. Mechanistic insights into GBM fate erasure by miR-9/9*-124 while inducing the postmitotic state would facilitate the understanding of GRNs that govern the tumorigenic identity of GBMs and potentially offer novel therapeutic implications. Indeed, miR-9/9*-124 readily induces mitotic exit in patient-derived GBM cell lines, represses GBM cell fates, and promotes neuronal identity over time as assessed by RNA-seq. Mice receiving GBM intracerebral xenografts with miR-9/9*-124 survived significantly longer than those receiving non-specific control miRNA. Global profiling of miRNA targeting activity by AGO2-eCLIP reveals that miR-124 binds to transcripts enriched in G1/S transition and mitogen response. Conversely, miR-506—a miR-124 homolog—despite of sharing identical seed sequences, has significantly less targeting activity and fails to stop cell cycle progression. We are currently dissecting how the difference in the miRNA 3’ sequence renders contrasting biological outcomes. Preliminary data suggests that the length of miRNA alone alters targeting specificity to cell cycle transcripts. However, different permutations of miRNA 3’ sequence, though sufficient to induce mitotic exit, are not all competent to achieve neuronal reprogramming, indicating that mitotic exit and neurogenic activities of miR-124 could be decoupled. We hope that understanding the grammar logic of miRNA targeting would provide deeper insights into how miRNAs can be leveraged to manipulate GBM identity.
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