4.6 Article

Posttranscriptional Regulation of the Human ABCG2 Multidrug Transporter Protein by Artificial Mirtrons

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12071068

Keywords

mirtron; miRNA; ABCG2; silencing; multidrug transporter

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Hungary: NKFIH-OTKA [PD121287, FK124661, VEKOP2.1.1-15-2016-00156, VEKOP-2.3.3-15-2017-00014, 2018-1.2.1-NKP-2018-00005]

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ABCG2 is a membrane transporter protein associated with multidrug resistance and tumor development. By designing artificial mirtrons, researchers were able to posttranscriptionally regulate ABCG2 expression, with mismatch at the first position resulting in better silencing. Additionally, a mismatch in the seed region did not impair efficient silencing at the protein level.
ABCG2 is a membrane transporter protein that has been associated with multidrug resistance phenotype and tumor development. Additionally, it is expressed in various stem cells, providing cellular protection against endobiotics and xenobiotics. In this study, we designed artificial mirtrons to regulate ABCG2 expression posttranscriptionally. Applying EGFP as a host gene, we could achieve efficient silencing not only in luciferase reporter systems but also at the ABCG2 protein level. Moreover, we observed important new sequential-functional features of the designed mirtrons. Mismatch at the first position of the mirtron-derived small RNA resulted in better silencing than full complementarity, while the investigated middle and 3 ' mismatches did not enhance silencing. These latter small RNAs operated most probably via non-seed specific translational inhibition in luciferase assays. Additionally, we found that a mismatch in the first position has not, but a second mismatch in the third position has abolished target mRNA decay. Besides, one nucleotide mismatch in the seed region did not impair efficient silencing at the protein level, providing the possibility to silence targets carrying single nucleotide polymorphisms or mutations. Taken together, we believe that apart from establishing an efficient ABCG2 silencing system, our designing pipeline and results on sequential-functional features are beneficial for developing artificial mirtrons for other targets.

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