4.5 Article

MicroRNA-30c promotes human adipocyte differentiation and co-represses PAI-1 and ALK2

Journal

RNA BIOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages 850-860

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/rna.8.5.16153

Keywords

microRNA; miR-30c; adipogenesis; adipocyte; differentiation; obesity; PAI-1; ALK2

Funding

  1. GEN-AU
  2. Austrian Genome Research (GEN-AU) funding program [820982, 820979]
  3. 'Austrian Agency for International Cooperation in Education & Research', OeAD [FR 14/2010]

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Obesity is characterized by excessive adipose tissue mass and associated with type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. To fight obesity and its sequels, elucidating molecular events that govern adipocyte differentiation and function is of key importance. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a novel class of non-coding RNAs that have been shown to regulate crucial cellular processes, including differentiation. Several studies have already assigned miRNAs to distinct functions in murine adipocyte differentiation but only a few studies did so for humans. Here, we investigated the function of miR-30c in human adipogenesis. miR-30c expression was increased during adipogenesis of human multipotent adipose-derived stem (hMADS) cells, and miR-30c overexpression enforced adipocyte marker gene induction and triglyceride accumulation. miRNA target prediction revealed two putative direct targets of miR-30c, PAI-1 (SERPINE1) and ALK2 (ACVR1, ACTRI), both inversely regulated to miR-30c during adipogenesis and responsive to miR-30c overexpression. Luciferase reporter assays confirmed PAI-1 and ALK2 as direct miR-30c targets. Moreover, reciprocal expression between miR-30c and PAI-1 could also be demonstrated in white adipose tissue of obesity mouse models, suggesting a potential physiological role of miR-30c for PAI-1 regulation in the obese state. Validating PAI-1 and ALK-2 as miR-30c mediators in adipogenesis revealed that not single silencing of PAI-1 or ALK2, but only co-silencing of both phenocopied the pro-adipogenic miR-30c effect. Thus, miR-30c can target two, so far not interconnected genes in distinct pathways, supporting the idea that miRNAs might coordinate larger regulatory networks than previously anticipated.

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