Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2041055 | Cell Reports | 2015 | 14 Pages |
•miR-302 is required for neural tube closure and embryonic survival•miR-302 loss results in increased proliferation of neural progenitors•miR-302 loss leads to precocious neuronal differentiation•miR-290 and miR-302 act redundantly early in development
SummaryThe evolutionarily conserved miR-302 family of microRNAs is expressed during early mammalian embryonic development. Here, we report that deletion of miR-302a-d in mice results in a fully penetrant late embryonic lethal phenotype. Knockout embryos have an anterior neural tube closure defect associated with a thickened neuroepithelium. The neuroepithelium shows increased progenitor proliferation, decreased cell death, and precocious neuronal differentiation. mRNA profiling at multiple time points during neurulation uncovers a complex pattern of changing targets over time. Overexpression of one of these targets, Fgf15, in the neuroepithelium of the chick embryo induces precocious neuronal differentiation. Compound mutants between mir-302 and the related mir-290 locus have a synthetic lethal phenotype prior to neurulation. Our results show that mir-302 helps regulate neurulation by suppressing neural progenitor expansion and precocious differentiation. Furthermore, these results uncover redundant roles for mir-290 and mir-302 early in development.
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