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      Analysis of microRNA transcription and post-transcriptional processing by Dicer in the context of CHO cell proliferation

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          Highlights

          • The expression of Dicer is correlated to growth rate in different CHO cell lines.

          • Global perturbation of microRNA levels via DICER knockdown or overexpression directly influences CHO growth behavior.

          • This provides strong evidence that microRNAs are key growth regulators in CHO cell lines.

          Abstract

          CHO cells are the mammalian cell line of choice for recombinant production of therapeutic proteins. However, their low rate of proliferation limits obtainable space-time yields due to inefficient biomass accumulation. We set out to correlate microRNA transcription to cell-specific growth-rate by microarray analysis of 5 CHO suspension cell lines with low to high specific growth rates. Global microRNA expression analysis and Pearson correlation studies showed that mature microRNA transcript levels are predominately up-regulated in a state of fast proliferation (46 positively correlated, 17 negatively correlated). To further validate this observation, the expression of three genes that are central to microRNA biogenesis (Dicer, Drosha and Dgcr8) was analyzed. The expression of Dicer, which mediates the final step in microRNA maturation, was found to be strongly correlated to growth rate. Accordingly, knockdown of Dicer impaired cell growth by reducing growth-correlating microRNA transcripts. Moderate ectopic overexpression of Dicer positively affected cell growth, while strong overexpression impaired growth, presumably due to the concomitant increase of microRNAs that inhibit cell growth. Our data therefore suggest that Dicer dependent microRNAs regulate CHO cell proliferation and that Dicer could serve as a potential surrogate marker for cellular proliferation.

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          Most cited references44

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          Origins and Mechanisms of miRNAs and siRNAs.

          Over the last decade, approximately 20-30 nucleotide RNA molecules have emerged as critical regulators in the expression and function of eukaryotic genomes. Two primary categories of these small RNAs--short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and microRNAs (miRNAs)--act in both somatic and germline lineages in a broad range of eukaryotic species to regulate endogenous genes and to defend the genome from invasive nucleic acids. Recent advances have revealed unexpected diversity in their biogenesis pathways and the regulatory mechanisms that they access. Our understanding of siRNA- and miRNA-based regulation has direct implications for fundamental biology as well as disease etiology and treatment.
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            Gene regulation by transcription factors and microRNAs.

            The properties of a cell are determined by the genetic information encoded in its genome. Understanding how such information is differentially and dynamically retrieved to define distinct cell types and cellular states is a major challenge facing molecular biology. Gene regulatory factors that control the expression of genomic information come in a variety of flavors, with transcription factors and microRNAs representing the most numerous gene regulatory factors in multicellular genomes. Here, I review common principles of transcription factor- and microRNA-mediated gene regulatory events and discuss conceptual differences in how these factors control gene expression.
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              A feedback loop comprising lin-28 and let-7 controls pre-let-7 maturation during neural stem-cell commitment.

              miRNA populations, including mammalian homologues of lin-4 (mir-125) and let-7, undergo a marked transition during stem-cell differentiation. Originally identified on the basis of their mutational phenotypes in stem-cell maturation, mir-125 and let-7 are strongly induced during neural differentiation of embryonic stem (ES) cells and embryocarcinoma (EC) cells. We report that embryonic neural stem (NS) cells express let-7 and mir-125, and investigate post-transcriptional mechanisms contributing to the induction of let-7. We demonstrate that the pluripotency factor Lin-28 binds the pre-let-7 RNA and inhibits processing by the Dicer ribonuclease in ES and EC cells. In NS cells, Lin-28 is downregulated by mir-125 and let-7, allowing processing of pre-let-7 to proceed. Suppression of let-7 or mir-125 activity in NS cells led to upregulation of Lin-28 and loss of pre-let-7 processing activity, suggesting that let-7, mir-125 and lin-28 participate in an autoregulatory circuit that controls miRNA processing during NS-cell commitment.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Biotechnol
                J. Biotechnol
                Journal of Biotechnology
                Elsevier Science Publishers
                0168-1656
                1873-4863
                20 November 2014
                20 November 2014
                : 190
                : 76-84
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Biotechnology, BOKU – University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria
                [b ]ACIB GmbH, Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology, Graz, Austria
                [c ]RNA Biology Group, Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics, Graz University of Technology, 8010 Graz, Austria
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author at: Department of Biotechnology, BOKU – University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria. Tel.: +43 1 47654 6232; fax: +43 1 47654 6675. nicole.borth@ 123456boku.ac.at
                Article
                S0168-1656(14)00037-6
                10.1016/j.jbiotec.2013.12.018
                4247382
                24486028
                70fe2caa-109b-454d-8074-b8f8abe73c32
                © 2014 The Authors
                History
                : 25 September 2013
                : 5 December 2013
                : 11 December 2013
                Categories
                Article

                Biotechnology
                chinese hamster ovary cells,microrna,dicer,cell engineering,microarray
                Biotechnology
                chinese hamster ovary cells, microrna, dicer, cell engineering, microarray

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