4.7 Article

Distinct miRNA Signatures and Networks Discern Fetal from Adult Erythroid Differentiation and Primary from Immortalized Erythroid Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073626

Keywords

microRNA; non-coding DNA; small RNA sequencing; erythropoiesis; CD34+; hematopoietic stem cell; gene regulatory network; long non-coding RNA; competing endogenous RNA; enrichment analysis; developmental regulation

Funding

  1. EU 7th Framework Programmes for research, technological development, and demonstration [306201]
  2. European Regional Development Fund
  3. Republic of Cyprus through the Research and Innovation Foundation [EXCELLENCE/1216/0092]
  4. TELETHON Cyprus
  5. EU Erasmus+ program
  6. Norway Grants 2014-2021
  7. Eurobank Ph.D. Scholarship

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miRNAs play crucial roles in regulating erythropoiesis, with differential expression linked to erythroid differentiation, cell type, and hemoglobin expression profiles. This study identified shared differentiation signatures in primary and immortalized cells, as well as informative discrepancies between different cell types based on miRNA expression. Furthermore, the study highlighted the intricate combinatorial miRNA regulation of globin expression in erythroid cells.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs crucial for post-transcriptional and translational regulation of cellular and developmental pathways. The study of miRNAs in erythropoiesis elucidates underlying regulatory mechanisms and facilitates related diagnostic and therapy development. Here, we used DNA Nanoball (DNB) small RNA sequencing to comprehensively characterize miRNAs in human erythroid cell cultures. Based on primary human peripheral-blood-derived CD34+ (hCD34+) cells and two influential erythroid cell lines with adult and fetal hemoglobin expression patterns, HUDEP-2 and HUDEP-1, respectively, our study links differential miRNA expression to erythroid differentiation, cell type, and hemoglobin expression profile. Sequencing results validated by reverse-transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) of selected miRNAs indicate shared differentiation signatures in primary and immortalized cells, characterized by reduced overall miRNA expression and reciprocal expression increases for individual lineage-specific miRNAs in late-stage erythropoiesis. Despite the high similarity of same-stage hCD34+ and HUDEP-2 cells, differential expression of several miRNAs highlighted informative discrepancies between both cell types. Moreover, a comparison between HUDEP-2 and HUDEP-1 cells displayed changes in miRNAs, transcription factors (TFs), target genes, and pathways associated with globin switching. In resulting TF-miRNA co-regulatory networks, major therapeutically relevant regulators of globin expression were targeted by many co-expressed miRNAs, outlining intricate combinatorial miRNA regulation of globin expression in erythroid cells.

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