1. Trang chủ
  2. » Luận Văn - Báo Cáo

Báo cáo khoa học: A study of microRNAs in silico and in vivo: bioimaging of microRNA biogenesis and regulation doc

10 469 0
Tài liệu đã được kiểm tra trùng lặp

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 10
Dung lượng 499,69 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

Here, we review the currently available miRNA imaging sys-tems that are used to create a better understanding of the production and function of miRNA in vivo as well as for monitoring th

Trang 1

A study of microRNAs in silico and in vivo: bioimaging of microRNA biogenesis and regulation

Soonhag Kim1,2,*, Do W Hwang2,3and Dong S Lee2,3,*

1 Medical Research Center, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea

2 Department of Nuclear Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea

3 Programs in Neuroscience, Seoul National University, Korea

MicroRNA (miRNA) has been recognized as a critical

regulatory gene involved in various biological

processes, such as development, cellular proliferation

and differentiation, in mammalian cells Recently, the

progress in miRNA research has accelerated the pace

of molecular diagnostics and therapeutics for clinical

application [1–3]

To date, the detection and analysis of endogenous

miRNA production has been conducted with

micro-arrays and fluorescence in situ hybridization using opti-cal probes [4–6] However, these techniques require the fixation or lysis of cells and thus cannot be used to study miRNA production in living cells A noninvasive monitoring method capable of real-time image acquisi-tion is needed to assess the miRNA producacquisi-tion pattern

in vivo Remarkable advances in molecular imaging techniques have resulted in the ability to not only provide noninvasive information and repetitive image

Keywords

bioimaging; microRNA; primary RNA;

luciferase

Correspondence

S Kim, Department of Nuclear Medicine,

Medical Research Center, Seoul National

University College of Medicine, 28

Yongon-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul 110 744,

Korea

Fax: +82 (2) 3668 7090

Tel: +82 (2) 3668 7028

E-mail: kimsoonhag@empal.com

D S Lee, Department of Nuclear Medicine,

Seoul National University College of

Medicine, 28 Yongon-dong, Jongno-gu,

Seoul 110 744, Korea

Fax: +82 (2) 3668 7090

Tel: 82 (2) 2072 2501

E-mail: dsl@plaza.snu.ac.kr

*These authors contributed equally to this

work

(Received 25 August 2008, revised 8

December 2008, accepted 21 January 2009)

doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.06935.x

Many recent studies have reported that microRNA (miRNA) biogenesis and function are related to the molecular mechanisms of various clinical diseases Several methods, including northern blotting and DNA chip anal-yses, are capable of assessing miRNA-production patterns in cells How-ever, the development of repetitive monitoring of the miRNA-production profile in a noninvasive manner is demanded for the application of miRNAs to human medicine Here, we describe a noninvasive system for monitoring miRNA biogenesis, from the stage of primary transcripts to that of mature miRNA regulation We review the optical methods that have been developed to image miRNA production at each step of the miRNA-processing pathway in living subjects We propose that an optical miRNA-imaging strategy, based on molecular imaging, can be used as

an miRNA imaging detector to monitor various miRNAs, by using differ-ent reporters, simultaneously, for high-throughput screening, and will provide potential application for the diagnosis and therapeutics of multiple diseases

Abbreviations

CMV, cytomegalovirus; DGCR8, DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8; miR, microRNA; pre-miR, precursor microRNA; pri-miR, primary microRNA.

Trang 2

aquisition, but also to carry out imaging over an

extended period of time without having to kill

experi-mental subjects Several reporter-based imaging

probes, including luciferase for optical imaging and

sodium iodide symporter and herpes simplex virus

1-thymidine kinase for radionuclide imaging, have

been widely used to track the distribution of implanted

stem cells and to evaluate endogenous gene expression

[7–10] The luciferase optical reporter genes, which

include firefly, Renilla and Gaussia luciferases, have

been widely used to visualize bioluminescence signals

in living animals While the firefly luciferase generates

bioluminescence energy (emission wavelength: 480 nm)

by catalyzing the oxidation of d-luciferin to

oxylucifer-in, Gaussia luciferase catalyzes the oxidation of its

substrate, coelenterazine, to produce bioluminescence

light (emission wavelength: 560 nm)

Although newly identified miRNAs in mammalian

cells have been intensively studied to establish their

role in human disease, including cancers, there has

been limited research on miRNA imaging Therefore,

active investigation of the production pattern and

functional action of miRNAs is needed The several

available imaging strategies used to detect endogenous

miRNA production can be used to monitor both the

primary transcript and the mature form of miRNA

(Fig 1) [11–13]

As miRNAs are essential in all biological areas, a

noninvasive technique for monitoring miRNA

biogene-sis would help to eluciate the versatile functions and

production patterns of miRNAs relative to genetic

modulation, cell development and multiple diseases,

in vivo In addition, the bioimaging techniques for

miRNAs based on molecular imaging methods could

be applied as target imaging indicators to help

under-stand the developmental process, in the development

of cancer biomarkers and to evaluate the therapeutic

effects, in terms of cancer therapy, in medicine Here,

we review the currently available miRNA imaging

sys-tems that are used to create a better understanding of

the production and function of miRNA in vivo as well

as for monitoring the therapeutic potential of miRNAs

in cancer

Bioimaging of microRNA biogenesis

The molecular mechanisms involved in miRNA

gener-ation are complex, and at least several processing steps

in the nucleus and cytoplasm should be monitored, by

imaging, as follows (Fig 1A): (a) imaging of a primary

miRNA (pri-miRNA) that is transcribed from the

gen-ome by RNA polymerase II in the nucleus (Fig 1B),

(b) imaging the miRNA precursor (pre-miRNA) that

is cleaved from pri-miRNA by Drosha and DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8 (DGCR8) (Fig 1C), (c) imaging a partially double-stranded miRNA complex (miRNA–miRNA*) that is released from the pre-miRNA by Dicer (Fig 1D), (d) imaging a single-stranded mature miRNA (Fig 1E) and (e) imaging miRNA function that either destabilizes mRNA or inhibits the translation of target genes by binding to target genes (Fig 1F)

First, imaging of the generation of pri-miRNA revealed that the 5¢ upstream region of genomic miRNA controls the long primary transcripts of miRNA that shape a single or a large family of miRNA gene clusters Interestingly, several miRNAs, including miRNA9 and miRNA124, are located at multiple loci, each of which can produce pri-miRNA, pre-miRNA and mature miRNA [12]; this implies that the 5¢ upstream region from a few different loci should

be investigated concurrently to provide an accurate reflection of the generation of a pri-miRNA Like other eukaryotic mRNAs, the primary transcript of miRNA is controlled by RNA polymerase II, and sev-eral transcription factors, including Oct4, c-Myc and Nanog, regulate the expression of primary miRNAs by binding them to the 5¢ terminal regulatory region of the miRNAs that participate in critical molecular and⁄ or cellular processes during the developmental stage [14–16] Similarly to the reporter gene assay of the eukaryotic promoter, the 5¢ upstream region of a miRNA that proportionally reflects the endogenous expression level of a pri-miRNA can be fused into the cassette of a promoterless optical reporter gene vector (Fig 1B) The cloned miRNA-specific reporter-imaging vector can be transfected into cultured cells, and the cell lines can be collected and implanted (e.g into the thighs of a mouse) The expression level of the pri-miRNA transcript can be obtained from living animals

by imaging the in vivo bioluminescence signals

The optical reporter gene system enables pri-miRNA generation to be monitored in vivo Lee et al [11] used the miRNA23a promoter to acquire images that showed differences in the endogenous expression

of pri-miRNA23a in HeLa, 293 and P19 cells Ko

et al [12] also monitored the neuronal-specific pri-miRNA9 during neurogenesis by using its upstream region

Second, to acquire the images of a pre-miRNA that was cleaved from pri-miRNA by Drosha and DGCR8, Lee et al [11] designed sense and antisense oligonucle-otides of the pri-miRNA23a that were annealed and cloned between the cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter and the start codon of the Gaussia luciferase gene

of the optical reporter gene vector (Fig 1C) The

Trang 3

Fig 1 Schematic illustration of detection systems for imaging miRNA biogenesis and regulation (A) Steps of miRNA processing Precursor miRNA is generated from longer primary transcripts by reaction with Drosha RNase III and the duplex miRNA form is produced by Dicer ribo-nuclease enzyme in the cytoplasm, followed by the generation of mature miRNA after interaction with RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) (B) Design for imaging pri-miRNAs The 5¢-regulatory upstream sequence of pri-miRNAs can be identified by the general database program (UCSC) and be split into different size segments of the chosen upstream region of miRNAs for acquisition of a strong optical signal [12] The upstream region of pri-miRNAs can be fused into an imaging reporter gene to examine pri-miRNA expression [11–13] The miRNA promoter-restricting reporter gene is transfected into several cell lines, and the harvested cells are implanted into a mouse The optical biolu-minescence image can be acquired in a time-dependent manner (C) Imaging strategy for pre-miRNAs The generation of pre-miRNAs can

be detected by the signal activity of the reporter gene when it is cleaved by the Drosha enzyme [11] (D) Molecular beacon for imaging a partially double-stranded miRNA complex (miRNA–miRNA*), which is released from miRNA by Dicer The synthetic duplex form of pre-miRNAs carrying quencher and organic dye at each strand can be designed In the presence of the Dicer enzyme, the quencher molecule and fluorophore dye are separated from each other after interaction of Dicer at the Dicer recognition site present on the pre-miRNAs, and the fluorescent signals are thereby released [19] (E) Schematic strategy for the reporter gene imaging of mature miRNAs Perfectly matched complementary sequence of mature miRNAs can be designed and cloned downstream of the reporter system under the control of the cyto-megalovirus (CMV) promoter [11,20] In the presence of the mature miRNA, bioluminescent signals are reduced by the miRNA function, mRNA destabilization (F) Reporter-gene frame imaging of miRNA targets The 3¢-UTR of an miRNA target containing the seed region of miRNA can be isolated and transferred into a downstream region of the reporter gene that is regulated by a constitutive promoter such as CMV When the imaging reporter gene of the miRNA target interacts with mature miRNAs in the cells, the activity of the reporter gene is turned off [24–28].

Trang 4

pre-miRNA imaging system showed an increase in

luciferase activity when the pri-miRNA23a was cleaved

by Drosha and DGCR8

Third, to monitor a partial double-stranded miRNA

complex, the functional imaging of Dicer is critical

(Dicer is the ribonuclease III enzyme that plays an

essential role in the production of mature miRNA by

cleaving the pre-miRNA) Several reports have

sup-ported the importance of Dicer, showing that deletion

of the Dicer enzyme causes phenotypic defects during

development, which results from the generation of

abnormal miRNA maturation [17,18] One study

reported assaying the cleavage of pre-miRNA by the

Dicer enzyme using quencher-based pre-miRNA to

detect endogenous or exogenous Dicer enzyme; the

results showed intense fluorescence signals with

dis-placement of the fluorescence dye from the quenching

molecule by the Dicer enzyme, which cleaved the

syn-thetic let-7 precursor miRNA (Fig 1D) [19] In the

absence of the Dicer protein, the emission energy of

the fluorescence dye attached to the end of one strand

of the pre-miRNA (as shown in Fig 1D) is absorbed

by the quenching molecule, showing the quenched

flu-orescence signal By contrast, with Dicer present there

is cleavage of the end of the pre-miRNA, and

acti-vated fluorescence signals are observed, which implies

that the fluorescence beacon system is useful for the

detection of the functional action of Dicer in the

intra-cellular space (Fig 1D)

Fourth, imaging of mature miRNA has been

per-formed with the optical reporter gene system, using

green fluorescent protein and luciferase, which has

enabled the endogenous production pattern of mature

miRNA to be monitored [11–13,20] This imaging

method focuses on the concept that the binding or

function of the mature miRNAs is based on nucleotide

sequence homology A perfectly matched

complemen-tary sequence of mature miRNA was cloned

immedi-ately after the stop codon of a reporter gene (Fig 1E)

The reporter gene activities were decreased by the

mRNA destabilization of the reporter gene following

interaction of the imaging system with the mature

miRNA in cells (Fig 1E)

Giraldez et al presented a good method for

evaluat-ing the existence of mature miRNAs usevaluat-ing a sevaluat-ingle

optical reporter imaging vector containing perfect

target sequences of miRNAs The green fluorescent

protein reporter imaging vector system was used to

examine the production pattern of mature miRNAs by

generation of Dicer mutants in zebrafish, elucidating

the vital role of miRNAs associated in morphogenesis

[20] However, this method was used only for the

detection of mature miRNAs

Generally, miRNAs are produced via complex pro-cesses controlled by a variety of proteins, including Drosha and Dicer The production of mature miRNA

is dependent on the functional action of many pro-teins that control the generation of mature miRNAs Tomson et al [21] reported that several miRNAs, including let-7, showed an unbalanced pattern of pro-duction during biogenesis, of a large amount of pri-miRNA and a low level of mature pri-miRNA, without being processed by the RNase III enzyme Drosha, and that no correlation between the production of pri-miRNAs and mature miRNAswas observed in cancer samples, compared with the correlation in nor-mal cells This information indicates that the matura-tion process is controlled by an unknown regulatory factor, and thus different levels of primary transcript and mature miRNA were shown to occur simulta-neously in living cells Therefore, the simultaneous monitoring of production of both pri-miRNA and mature miRNA is required using different optical reporter genes

The bioluminescent imaging proteins, firefly lucifer-ase and Gaussia luciferlucifer-ase, have their own sub-strates, d-luciferin and coelenterazaine, respectively, with their unique peak light emissions, at 480 and

560 nm, respectively These proteins can thus be used

to image two different molecular actions simulta-neously Lee et al [11] reported that the two differ-ent reporter gene systems (firefly luciferase and Gaussia luciferase, described above) could simulta-neously image primary and mature forms of miRNA23a in cancer cells (Fig 2) The in vivo bio-luminescence signals from pri-miR23a and mature miR23a were observed in cancer-grafted nude mice Firefly luciferase reporters revealed the primary tran-script activity of miRNA23 using the miRNA23 promoter (miR23P639⁄ Fluc)-controlled firefly lucifer-ase reporter system Conversely, the production of mature miR23a was detected using the Gaussia lucif-erase reporter system, which contains three copies of the miR23a-binding sequence (CMV⁄ Gaussia lucifer-ase⁄ 3 · PT_miR23a) Interestingly, in this report, unlike the results on bioluminescence studies carried out on HeLa and P19 cells that showed increased firefly luciferase signals for pri-miRNA23a and the resultant highly reduced Gaussia luciferase activities for mature miRNA23a, 293 cells showed a slow turnover from pri-miR23a to mature miRNA23a by unknown mechanisms, implying the capability of the reporter gene system to assess and visualize the post-transcriptional regulation of miRNA [11] Therefore,

a variety of imaging strategies, showing each step in the generation of miRNAs, will provide critical

Trang 5

information for understanding the miRNA biogenesis

related to human diseases

Imaging miRNA targets

While hundreds of miRNAs are known, identification

of their target genes has been a considerable challenge

The results of bioinformatics and microarray

experi-ments have shown that miRNAs can target hundreds

of transcripts, both directly and indirectly [13,22]

Gen-eral methodologies by which the functional regulation

of endogenous miRNA is investigated utilize a

bioin-formatically analyzed seed region that contains seven

nucleotides of a miRNA response sequence in the

3¢-UTR of target genes [23] This 3¢-UTR-based

lucif-erase system, containing the seed region, has been

widely used for target identification and for elucidating

the functional relationship between miRNA and its

targets (Fig 1F) [13,24–28] Computer database

programs, such as the PicTar database, offer an easy

approach with which to identify the 3¢-UTR of the

miRNA target candidates by scoring the dependent

target prediction Many studies have reported a variety

of target genes that were significantly down-regulated

by specific miRNAs These targets were determined

in vitro using a reporter gene system containing the 3¢-UTR of the targets located immediately after the stop codon of the luciferase reporter gene [13,29] From this reporter system, partial interaction of miRNAs with a 3¢-UTR region in reporter gene constructs resulted in reduction of the reporter signal in cells Using the 3¢-UTR-based Renilla luciferase reporter gene system, Yan et al [22] obtained quantitative

in vitro images of nine transcripts that were predicted

to be miRNA9 targets using the ensemble machine-learning algorithm However, in vivo imaging of miRNA regulation has not been reported, with the exception of a report by Kim et al [13], in which homeobox B5 (which was verified by microarray exper-iments) was identified to be one of the endogenous targets of miRNA221 that is highly expressed in papillary thyroid carcinoma The in vivo biolumines-cent signals from the 3¢-UTR region of homeobox B5 containing the miRNA221 seed region fused into the Gaussia reporter gene were significantly decreased by mature miRNA221 during the development of

Fig 2 Noninvasive bioimaging of miRNA23 biogenesis to examine the production of both the pri-miR23a transcript and the mature miR23a

in nude mice MiR23P639 ⁄ Fluc (firefly luciferase reporter system regulated by miR23a promoter) and CMV ⁄ Gluc ⁄ 3 · PT_miR23a (Gaussia luciferase reporter system containing three copies of an miR23a-binding sequence that is completely complementary to mature miR23a) were cotransfected with 1 · 10 7

HeLa, 293 and P19 cells using the lipofection method (implantation into the right thigh of nude mice) pGL3⁄ basic (promoterless-based firefly luciferase reporter system)-transfected and cytomegalovirus ⁄ Gluc (Gaussia luciferase vector driven

by the cytomegalovirus promoter)-transfected cell lines were also implanted into the left thigh of mice as controls The bioluminescence activity of three cell lines transfected with the firefly luciferase vector, controlled by the miRNA23 promoter, was greater than for cells trans-fected with promoterless vector controls and represents the degree of miRNA23 production in HeLa cells (A, upper), 293 cells (B, upper) and P19 embryonic carcinoma cells (C, upper) Simultaneous monitoring of the bioluminescence signals in the same mouse was detected using the Gaussia luciferase reporter system Production of in vivo mature miRNA23 was detected in three cell lines using the Gaussia lucif-erase reporter vector containing three tandem repeat regions of miRNA23 binding sequence (reprinted with permission [11]).

Trang 6

papillary thyroid carcinoma [13] These results were

obtained from directly monitoring the cells using the

3¢-UTR-based Gaussia luciferase reporter gene system

One limitation of the 3¢-UTR-based reporter gene

sys-tem for imaging endogenous targets of miRNA was

focused on the targets containing the seed region,

which resulted in exclusion of targets regulated by

other miRNA mechanisms, such as genes regulated by

the translational inhibition of miRNA

Unlike reporter imaging systems based on perfect

target sequences, as shown in Fig 1E, the

3¢-UTR-based reporter system can be used to elucidate the real

function of miRNAs (Fig 1F) In general, the

func-tional actions of miRNAs in mammalian cells, unlike

plant cells, are associated with the translational

inhibi-tion of target mRNAs by binding miRNA to the seed

region of the target mRNA with noncomplementarity

between the miRNA and its target Therefore, the

3¢-UTR-based imaging reporter system reflects the real

action of mature miRNA in mammalian cells,

com-pared with reporter-imaging systems that use perfect

target sequences from miRNAs

In vivo imaging of miRNA in cancers

and neuronal development

miRNAs have been associated with developmental

processes in many types of cells, including embryonic,

neuronal, muscular and lymphatic cells Abnormal

cel-lular development, as occurs with cancer, has also been

associated with miRNAs Indeed, a wide range of

miRNAs, including miRNA221, 21 and 142, are

involved in multiple oncogene targets in cancer cells,

which are thought to originate from two main basic

mechanisms, that is, functioning as either a tumor

sup-pressor gene or as an oncogenic gene [13,30–32] First,

the widespread down-regulated form of miRNA that

regulates multiple oncogenes causes tumorigenesis,

resulting from abnormalities occurring during each of

the steps of miRNA biogenesis Second, the oncogenic

characteristics of the miRNAs regulate the progression

of cancer by preventing the tumor suppressor genes

from producing tumor suppressor protein [33] These

contrasting roles of cancer-related miRNAs have been

considered for the development of therapeutic tools to

be used against cancer cells Recent evidence has

indi-cated that the use of anti-miRNA296 showed a

signifi-cant therapeutic effect by targeting miRNA296, which

is highly expressed in endothelial tumor cells [34] The

therapeutic effect of anti-miRNA296 for reduction of

tumor angiogenesis was evaluated in

tumor-xenograft-ed mice by measuring the decrease of optical signal

in vivo [34] Also, miRNA21 is a potential therapeutic

target for cancer treatment, as overexpression of anti-miRNA21 in hepatocellular carcinoma and glioblas-toma cells was shown to down-regulate the oncogenic miRNA21 [35] Based on the use of anti-miRNA21 as the therapeutic agent, the therapeutic effects on the tumor using anti-miRNA21, which is an inhibitor of miRNA21, have been reported for the first time; these findings indicated that the real-time tumor regression could be clearly visualized in luciferase-expressing tumor-bearing mice [36] Corsten et al [36] showed sig-nificant cytoreduction effects in tumors using a dual therapeutic method with locked nucleic acid-modified anti-miRNA21 and neural precursor cells expressing Secretable form of tumor necrosis factor-related apop-tosis inducing ligand (S-TRAIL) (Fig 3) However, this study used in vitro transfection of anti-miRNA21 for in vivo cancer therapy, indicating that the in vivo delivery of miRNAs or anti-miRNAs remains to be demonstrated Recently, our group developed an

in vivo system for monitoring miRNA221, which is known to be overexpressed in papillary thyroid carci-noma cells Our system can be used to image the production of miRNA221 in thyroid cancers With chemically modified anti-miRNA221 it can also be used to examine therapeutic effects [13]

Previous studies have suggested that MYC and RAS are putative target genes for the let-7 miRNA family

in lung cancer [37,38], which can show potential effects

on the treatment of cancer using let-7 as the therapeu-tic agent Therefore, the therapeutherapeu-tic imaging approach using anti-oncogenic miRNAs, such as let-7, should be further explored to validate its therapeutic efficacy In this manner, noninvasive cancer-associated miRNA-imaging systems can be developed to monitor the therapeutic effects, not only by blocking the oncogenic miRNA participating in suppressing the tumor-suppressor genes, but also by the over production of miRNAs that can repress several oncogenes

miRNAs play an important role in determining the specification and fate of cells by regulating a number

of genes responsible for governing cellular develop-ment The tissue-specific or cell-specific distribution of miRNAs might be a good target for monitoring the tissue-restricted production of miRNAs [30] It has been shown that some miRNAs, including miR-NA124a, 9, 9*, 124, 128 and 132, are primarily enriched in brain tissue, where they are implicated in neuronal development Indeed, the production of these miRNAs increased as neuronal lineages progressed [39–41] Ko et al [12] reported that in vivo imaging of miRNA9 and miRNA9* (the opposite sequence of miRNA9), generated from the same pre-miRNA9, showed distinctive and unbalanced patterns of

Trang 7

sion during neurogenesis This illustrates that the

imaging of neuron-specific miRNA9 and miRNA9*

can be important for understanding the functional role

of miRNA during neurogenesis, and for investigating

differences between miRNA and miRNA* Generally,

antisense miRNAs (miRNA*), namely complementary

sequences of sense miRNAs that participate in the real

functions of miRNAs, are known for their low

produc-tion and fast degradaproduc-tion of miRNA* by endonucleases, compared with sense miRNAs [42] However, for several miRNAs, including miRNA9, it has been shown that both sense and antisense strands can regulate target mRNA [39,43] A noninvasive system for imaging the production of neuron-specific miRNA9 and miRNA9* would facilitate a better understanding

of the unique molecular mechanisms associated with the biogenesis of miRNA during neuronal develop-ment in living subjects

In this context, noninvasive bioimaging systems using neuron-specific miRNAs could be applied not only to monitor the functional roles and production profiles of neuron-related miRNAs, but also as imaging tools to track neuronal differentiation imaging based on mole-cular imaging techniques The development of imaging strategies related to miRNAs will continue to be applied as imaging tools for detecting the progression

of neuronal development, as well as for cancer diagnos-tics and therapeutic application in human medicine

Conclusion Recently, the increased interest in miRNAs, and con-cerns that miRNAs are known to play important roles

in clinical diseases, have attracted many molecular researchers to study miRNAs associated with the bio-genesis and functional role of miRNAs To study a variety of biological phenomena related to miRNAs, noninvasive miRNA imaging techniques have been developed to track the generation and function of miRNAs by monitoring their targets regulating cellular and molecular events, as well as the expression levels

of pri-miRNA and mature miRNA To visualize the generation of miRNAs using reporter imaging systems, optical imaging strategies using the promoter region of the miRNAs or miRNA responsive elements provides non-invasive molecular imaging information regarding how and when they are transcribed by transcription factors and where they originate, in the case of a miRNA located on multiple chromosomal loci In addition, these techniques show the extent to which mature miRNAs are formed during cellular develop-ment Optical reporter genes, such as firefly or Gaussia luciferase genes, are well suited for monitoring miRNA biogenesis in small animals because they have the advantages of low background noise and high sensitiv-ity However, these optical systems remain a distant goal for clinical application because of the optical signal attenuation by a tissue depth Therefore, further investigation of miRNAs and development of target detection methods based on radionuclide imaging modalities, such as the sodium iodide symporter and

Fig 3 Bioluminescence imaging system created to evaluate the

therapeutic potential of anti-miRNA21 (A, B) After firefly

luciferase-expressing U87 glioblastoma cells were treated with locked nucleic

acid anti-miRNA21, the U87 cells collected were intracranially

injected into the brains of mice The bioluminescence signals from

implanted U87 cells expressing luciferase dramatically reduced with

time, showing a therapeutic effect of anti-miRNA This effect was

supported by the results of quantitative region of interest analysis

(reprinted with permission [36]).

Trang 8

the MR imaging reporter gene (such as the transferrin

receptor) are required to further the advancement

towards application to human medicine [44] However,

the optical signals from the mature miRNA-based

reporter gene are basically a ‘turn-off’ system as a

result of the function of the miRNAs; this might

intro-duce ambiguity with regard to the interpretation of

whether the observed signaling-off data results from

the production of numerous mature miRNAs or only

from cell death

An alternative strategy for imaging mature miRNAs

that overcomes the limitations of the signaling-off

prob-lem in the reporter gene system is a tunable fluorescence

system that uses a quenching molecule-based molecular

beacon The molecular beacon is a fluorescence

detec-tion system composed of a single-stranded and stem–

loop nucleotide that is complementary to the target

DNA sequence or structurally bound to the protein of

the target This has been exploited as a powerful

imag-ing probe for the detection of intracellular targets

[45,46] The molecular beacon approach can be applied

to the investigation of endogenous miRNA production

profiles as a result of miRNAs being bound to their

targets based on sequence homology The signal-on

imaging strategy, using the molecular beacon to image

mature miRNAs, is as follows In the absence of mature

miRNA molecules, the fluorescence energy from the

fluorophore dye is absorbed by quencher molecules,

resulting in no fluorescence signal By contrast, by

displacing the quencher from the organic fluorophore

dye, the presence of mature miRNA causes the

mole-cular beacon light-on result The molemole-cular beacon

approach used for the detection of miRNAs will

pro-vide more accurate imaging information about miRNA

biogenesis in cellular developments and disease

In summary, molecular imaging techniques can be

used to monitor the in vivo dynamics of miRNAs

non-invasively, including their production profiles and

regu-lation First, the miRNA-based optical system, as

proposed in several previous studies, can be used for

the in vitro and in vivo investigations of miRNA

production patterns Second, noninvasive monitoring

of miRNAs provides useful information of the possible

role of miRNAs involving cellular developments

Third, the in vivo molecular reporter system might be

used to monitor repetitively, with precise measurement,

the therapeutic effect using miRNAs relevant to cancer

in living animals A study of the expression patterns of

miRNA, providing fine tuning of gene regulation, will

help to understand the interplay of complex gene

regu-latory networks during developmental stages and the

changes of these networks in disease and after

applica-tion of a variety of therapeutic strategies Critically,

the noninvasive imaging approach of miRNA genera-tion and its activity will improve our ability to diag-nose and treat human disease

Acknowledgements This work was supported by the Nano Bio Rege-nomics Project and by the Nuclear R&D program through the Korea Science and Engineering Founda-tion funded by the Ministry of EducaFounda-tion, Science and Technology (M20704000039-08M0400-03910) and by the Seoul R & BD program (10550) and National R&D Program for Cancer Control of the Ministry of Health & Welfare (0820320)

References

1 Negrini M, Ferracin M, Sabbioni S & Croce CM (2007) MicroRNAs in human cancer: from research to ther-apy J Cell Sci 120, 1833–1840

2 Blenkiron C & Miska EA (2007) miRNAs in cancer: approaches, aetiology, diagnostics and therapy Hum Mol Genet 16, R106–R113

3 Van Rooij E & Olson EN (2007) MicroRNAs: powerful new regulators of heart disease and provocative thera-peutic targets J Clin Invest 117, 2369–2376

4 Miska EA, Alvarez-Saavedra E, Townsend M, Yoshii

A, Sestan N, Rakic P, Constantine-Paton M & Horvitz

HR (2004) Microarray analysis of microRNA expres-sion in the developing mammalian brain Genome Biol

5, R68.1–R68.13

5 Krichevsky AM, King KS, Donahue CP, Khrapko K & Kosik KS (2003) A microRNA array reveals extensive regulation of microRNAs during brain development RNA 9, 1274–1281

6 Silahtaroglu AN, Nolting D, Dyrskjøt L, Berezikov E, Møller M, Tommerup N & Kauppinen S (2007) Detec-tion of microRNAs in frozen tissue secDetec-tions by fluores-cence in situ hybridization using locked nucleic acid probes and tyramide signal amplification Nat Protoc 2, 2520–2528

7 Gambhir SS, Barrio JR, Herschman HR & Phelps ME (1999) Assays for noninvasive imaging of reporter gene expression Nucl Med Biol 26, 481–490

8 Blasberg RG (2003) In vivo molecular-genetic imaging: multi-modality nuclear and optical combinations Nucl Med Biol 30, 879–888

9 Wang X, Rosol M, Ge S, Peterson D, McNamara G, Pollack H, Kohn DB, Nelson MD & Crooks GM (2003) Dynamic tracking of human hematopoietic stem cell engraftment using in vivo bioluminescence imaging Blood 102, 3478–3482

10 Kim KI, Chung JK, Kang JH, Lee YJ, Shin JH, Oh

HJ, Jeong JM, Lee DS & Lee MC (2005)

Trang 9

tion of endogenous p53-mediated transcription in vivo

using sodium iodide symporter Clin Cancer Res 11,

123–128

11 Lee JY, Kim S, Hwang do W, Jeong JM, Chung JK,

Lee MC & Lee DS (2008) Development of a

dual-lucif-erase reporter system for in vivo visualization of

MicroRNA biogenesis and posttranscriptional

regulation J Nucl Med 49, 285–294

12 Ko MH, Kim S, Hwang do W, Ko HY, Kim YH &

Lee DS (2008) Bioimaging of the unbalanced expression

of microRNA9 and microRNA9* during the neuronal

differentiation of P19 cells FEBS J 275, 2605–2616

13 Kim HJ, Kim YH, Lee DS, Chung JK & Kim S (2008)

In vivoimaging of functional targeting of miR-221 in

papillary thyroid carcinoma J Nucl Med 49, 1686–1693

14 Lee Y, Kim M, Han J, Yeom KH, Lee S, Baek SH &

Kim VN (2004) MicroRNA genes are transcribed by

RNA polymerase II EMBO J 23, 4051–4060

15 O’Donnell KA, Wentzel EA, Zeller KI, Dang CV &

Mendell JT (2005) c-Myc-regulated microRNAs

modu-late E2F1 expression Nature 435, 839–843

16 Boyer LA, Lee TI, Cole MF, Johnstone SE, Levine SS,

Zucker JP, Guenther MG, Kumar RM, Murray HL,

Jenner RG et al (2005) Core transcriptional regulatory

circuitry in human embryonic stem cells Cell 122, 947–

956

17 Chen JF, Murchison EP, Tang R, Callis TE,

Tatsugu-chi M, Deng Z, Rojas M, Hammond SM, Schneider

MD, Selzman CH et al (2008) Targeted deletion of

Dicer in the heart leads to dilated cardiomyopathy and

heart failure Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105, 2111–2116

18 Yang WJ, Yang DD, Na S, Sandusky GE, Zhang Q &

Zhao G (2005) Dicer is required for embryonic

angio-genesis during mouse development J Biol Chem 280,

9330–9335

19 Davies BP & Arenz C (2008) A fluorescence probe for

assaying micro RNA maturation Bioorg Med Chem 16,

49–55

20 Giraldez AJ, Cinalli RM, Glasner ME, Enright AJ,

Thomson JM, Baskerville S, Hammond SM, Bartel DP

& Schier AF (2005) MicroRNAs regulate brain

mor-phogenesis in zebrafish Science 308, 833–838

21 Thomson JM, Newman M, Parker JS, Morin-Kensicki

EM, Wright T & Hammond SM (2006) Extensive

post-transcriptional regulation of microRNAs and its

impli-cations for cancer Genes Dev 20, 2202–2207

22 Yan X, Chao T, Tu K, Zhang Y, Xie L, Gong Y, Yuan

J, Qiang B & Peng X (2007) Improving the prediction

of human microRNA target genes by using ensemble

algorithm FEBS Lett 581, 1587–1593

23 Lewis BP, Shih IH, Jones-Rhoades MW, Bartel DP &

Burge CB (2003) Prediction of mammalian microRNA

targets Cell 115, 787–798

24 Greco SJ & Rameshwar P (2007) MicroRNAs regulate

synthesis of the neurotransmitter substance P in human

mesenchymal stem cell-derived neuronal cells Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 104, 15484–15489

25 Asangani IA, Rasheed SA, Nikolova DA, Leupold JH, Colburn NH, Post S & Allgayer H (2008)

MicroRNA-21 (miR-MicroRNA-21) post-transcriptionally downregulates tumor suppressor Pdcd4 and stimulates invasion, intravasation and metastasis in colorectal cancer Oncogene 27, 2128– 2136

26 Sengupta S, den Boon JA, Chen IH, Newton MA, Stanhope SA, Cheng YJ, Chen CJ, Hildesheim A, Sugden B & Ahlquist P (2008) MicroRNA 29c is down-regulated in nasopharyngeal carcinomas, up-regulating mRNAs encoding extracellular matrix proteins Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105, 5874–5878

27 Boutz PL, Chawla G, Stoilov P & Black DL (2007) MicroRNAs regulate the expression of the alternative splicing factor nPTB during muscle development Genes Dev 21, 71–84

28 Ye W, Lv Q, Wong CK, Hu S, Fu C, Hua Z, Cai

G, Li G, Yang BB & Zhang Y (2008) The effect of central loops in miRNA:MRE duplexes on the efficiency of miRNA-mediated gene regulation PLoS ONE 3, e1719

29 Tsuchiya Y, Nakajima M, Takagi S, Taniya T & Yokoi T (2006) MicroRNA regulates the expression

of human cytochrome P450 1B1 Cancer Res 66, 9090– 9098

30 Lagos-Quintana M, Rauhut R, Yalcin A, Meyer J, Lendeckel W & Tuschl T (2002) Identification of tissue-specific microRNAs from mouse Curr Biol 12, 735– 739

31 Ciafre` SA, Galardi S, Mangiola A, Ferracin M, Liu

CG, Sabatino G, Negrini M, Maira G, Croce CM & Farace MG (2005) Extensive modulation of a set of microRNAs in primary glioblastoma Biochem Biophys Res Commun 334, 1351–1358

32 Chan JA, Krichevsky AM & Kosik KS (2005) Micro-RNA-21 is an antiapoptotic factor in human glioblas-toma cells Cancer Res 65, 6029–6033

33 Esquela-Kerscher A & Slack FJ (2006) Oncomirs – microRNAs with a role in cancer Nat Rev Cancer 6, 259–269

34 Wu¨rdinger T, Tannous BA, Saydam O, Skog J, Grau S, Soutschek J, Weissleder R, Breakefield XO & Krichev-sky AM (2008) miR-296 regulates growth factor recep-tor overexpression in angiogenic endothelial cells Cancer Cell 14, 382–393

35 Si M-L, Zhu S, Wu H, Lu Z, Wu F & Mo Y-Y (2007) miR-21-mediated tumor growth Oncogene 26, 2799– 2803

36 Corsten MF, Miranda R, Kasmieh R, Krichevsky AM, Weissleder R & Shah K (2007) MicroRNA-21 knock-down disrupts glioma growth in vivo and displays syner-gistic cytotoxicity with neural precursor cell delivered S-TRAIL in human gliomas Cancer Res 67, 8994–9000

Trang 10

37 Zhang B, Pan X, Cobb GP & Anderson TA (2007)

microRNAs as oncogenes and tumor suppressors Dev

Biol 302, 1–12

38 Johnson SM, Grosshans H, Shingara J, Byrom M,

Jarvis R, Cheng A, Labourier E, Reinert KL, Brown D

& Slack FJ (2005) RAS is regulated by the let-7

microRNA family Cell 120, 635–647

39 Sempere LF, Freemantle S, Pitha-Rowe I, Moss E,

Dmitrovsky E & Ambros V (2004) Expression profiling

of mammalian microRNAs uncovers a subset of

brain-expressed microRNAs with possible roles in murine and

human neuronal differentiation Genome Biol 5, R13.1–

R13.11

40 Smirnova L, Gra¨fe A, Seiler A, Schumacher S, Nitsch

R & Wulczyn FG (2005) Regulation of miRNA

expres-sion during neural cell specification Eur J Neurosci 2,

11469–11477

41 Song L & Tuan RS (2006) MicroRNAs and cell

differ-entiation in mammalian development Birth Defects Res

C Embryo Today 78, 140–149

42 Landgraf P, Rusu M, Sheridan R, Sewer A, Iovino N, Aravin A, Pfeffer S, Rice A, Kamphorst AO,

Landthaler M et al (2007) A mammalian microRNA expression atlas based on small RNA library sequencing Cell 129, 1401–1414

43 Suh MR, Lee Y, Kim JY, Kim SK, Moon SH, Lee JY, Cha KY, Chung HM, Yoon HS, Moon SY et al (2004) Human embryonic stem cells express a unique set of microRNAs Dev Biol 270, 488–498

44 Kang JH & Chung JK (2008) Molecular-genetic imag-ing based on reporter gene expression J Nucl Med 49, 164S–179S

45 Nitin N, Santangelo PJ, Kim G, Nie S & Bao G (2004) Peptide-linked molecular beacons for efficient delivery and rapid mRNA detection in living cells Nucleic Acids Res 32, e58.1–e58.8

46 Mhlanga MM, Vargas DY, Fung CW, Kramer FR & Tyagi S (2005) tRNA-linked molecular beacons for imaging mRNAs in the cytoplasm of living cells Nucleic Acids Res 33, 1902–1912

Ngày đăng: 16/03/2014, 01:20

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

TÀI LIỆU CÙNG NGƯỜI DÙNG

TÀI LIỆU LIÊN QUAN

🧩 Sản phẩm bạn có thể quan tâm