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      The microRNA miR-34 modulates aging and neurodegeneration in Drosophila

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          Abstract

          Human neurodegenerative diseases possess the temporal hallmark of afflicting the elderly population. Hence, aging is among the most significant factors to impinge on disease onset and progression 1 , yet little is known of molecular pathways that connect these processes. Central to understanding this connection is to unmask the nature of pathways that functionally integrate aging, chronic maintenance of the brain and modulation of neurodegenerative disease. microRNAs (miRNA) are emerging as critical players in gene regulation during development, yet their role in adult-onset, age-associated processes are only beginning to be revealed. Here we report that the conserved miRNA miR-34 regulates age-associated events and long-term brain integrity in Drosophila, presenting such a molecular link between aging and neurodegeneration. Fly miR-34 expression is adult-onset, brain-enriched and age-modulated. Whereas miR-34 loss triggers a gene profile of accelerated brain aging, late-onset brain degeneration and a catastrophic decline in survival, miR-34 upregulation extends median lifespan and mitigates neurodegeneration induced by human pathogenic polyglutamine (polyQ) disease protein. Some of the age-associated effects of miR-34 require adult-onset translational repression of Eip74EF, an essential ETS domain transcription factor involved in steroid hormone pathways. These studies indicate that miRNA-dependent pathways may impact adult-onset, age-associated events by silencing developmental genes that later have a deleterious influence on adult life cycle and disease, and highlight fly miR-34 as a key miRNA with a role in this process

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          Most cited references29

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          Prediction of mammalian microRNA targets.

          MicroRNAs (miRNAs) can play important gene regulatory roles in nematodes, insects, and plants by basepairing to mRNAs to specify posttranscriptional repression of these messages. However, the mRNAs regulated by vertebrate miRNAs are all unknown. Here we predict more than 400 regulatory target genes for the conserved vertebrate miRNAs by identifying mRNAs with conserved pairing to the 5' region of the miRNA and evaluating the number and quality of these complementary sites. Rigorous tests using shuffled miRNA controls supported a majority of these predictions, with the fraction of false positives estimated at 31% for targets identified in human, mouse, and rat and 22% for targets identified in pufferfish as well as mammals. Eleven predicted targets (out of 15 tested) were supported experimentally using a HeLa cell reporter system. The predicted regulatory targets of mammalian miRNAs were enriched for genes involved in transcriptional regulation but also encompassed an unexpectedly broad range of other functions.
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            Pleiotropy, Natural Selection, and the Evolution of Senescence

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              Proteotoxic stress and inducible chaperone networks in neurodegenerative disease and aging.

              The long-term health of the cell is inextricably linked to protein quality control. Under optimal conditions this is accomplished by protein homeostasis, a highly complex network of molecular interactions that balances protein biosynthesis, folding, translocation, assembly/disassembly, and clearance. This review will examine the consequences of an imbalance in homeostasis on the flux of misfolded proteins that, if unattended, can result in severe molecular damage to the cell. Adaptation and survival requires the ability to sense damaged proteins and to coordinate the activities of protective stress response pathways and chaperone networks. Yet, despite the abundance and apparent capacity of chaperones and other components of homeostasis to restore folding equilibrium, the cell appears poorly adapted for chronic proteotoxic stress when conformationally challenged aggregation-prone proteins are expressed in cancer, metabolic disease, and neurodegenerative disease. The decline in biosynthetic and repair activities that compromises the integrity of the proteome is influenced strongly by genes that control aging, thus linking stress and protein homeostasis with the health and life span of the organism.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                0410462
                6011
                Nature
                Nature
                Nature
                0028-0836
                1476-4687
                13 January 2012
                15 February 2012
                23 August 2012
                : 482
                : 7386
                : 519-523
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                [2 ]Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                [3 ]Institute on Aging, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                [4 ]Penn Center for Bioinformatics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                [5 ]Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: nbonini@ 123456sas.upenn.edu
                [6]

                Present address: Division of Physiological Chemistry I, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden

                Article
                nihpa345980
                10.1038/nature10810
                3326599
                22343898
                c7590f3d-32da-43d1-a5de-3edb250645c2

                Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms

                History
                Funding
                Funded by: National Institute on Aging : NIA
                Award ID: U01 AG032984-02 || AG
                Funded by: National Institute on Aging : NIA
                Award ID: T32 AG000255-02 || AG
                Funded by: National Institute on Aging : NIA
                Award ID: RC2 AG036528-01 || AG
                Funded by: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke : NINDS
                Award ID: R01 NS043578-05 || NS
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