Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2041025 Cell Reports 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryOne puzzling observation in patients affected with Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS), who overall exhibit systemic and dramatic premature aging, is the absence of any conspicuous cognitive impairment. Recent studies based on induced pluripotent stem cells derived from HGPS patient cells have revealed a lack of expression in neural derivatives of lamin A, a major isoform of LMNA that is initially produced as a precursor called prelamin A. In HGPS, defective maturation of a mutated prelamin A induces the accumulation of toxic progerin in patient cells. Here, we show that a microRNA, miR-9, negatively controls lamin A and progerin expression in neural cells. This may bear major functional correlates, as alleviation of nuclear blebbing is observed in nonneural cells after miR-9 overexpression. Our results support the hypothesis, recently proposed from analyses in mice, that protection of neural cells from progerin accumulation in HGPS is due to the physiologically restricted expression of miR-9 to that cell lineage.

Graphical AbstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Lamin A is specifically repressed in iPSC neurons derivatives ► miR-9 knocks down lamin A and progerin expression ► miR-9 overexpression improves HGPS nuclear abnormalities

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences (General)
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