4.6 Article

A eutherian-specific microRNA controls the translation of Satb2 in a model of cortical differentiation

Journal

STEM CELL REPORTS
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 1496-1509

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stemcr.2021.04.020

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of University and Research grant [PRIN-2102]
  2. EU Commission FP7 PAIN-CAGE Project [603191]
  3. H2020-ICT-2016 MADIA Project [732678]

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This study investigates the expression and stability of key transcription factors in developing mouse cortical cells, with a focus on SATB2 mRNA. It suggests that early inhibition of SATB2 translation may be released during development. Additionally, miR541 and miR-92a/b are identified as potential regulators of SATB2 inhibition, impacting cortical cell identities timing.
Cerebral cortical development is controlled by key transcription factors that specify the neuronal identities in the different layers. The mechanisms controlling their expression in distinct cells are only partially known. We investigated the expression and stability of Tbr1, Bcl11b, Fezf2, Satb2, and Cux1 mRNAs in single developing mouse cortical cells. We observe that Satb2 mRNA appears much earlier than its protein and in a set of cells broader than expected, suggesting an initial inhibition of its translation, subsequently released during development. Mechanistically, Satb2 30UTR modulates protein translation of GFP reporters during mouse corticogenesis. We select miR541, a eutherian-specific miRNA, and miR-92a/b as the best candidates responsible for SATB2 inhibition, being strongly expressed in early and reduced in late progenitor cells. Their inactivation triggers robust and premature SATB2 translation in both mouse and human cortical cells. Our findings indicate RNA interference as a major mechanism in timing cortical cell identities.

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