A microRNA switch regulates the rise in hypothalamic GnRH production before puberty
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Date
2016
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
A sparse population of a few hundred primarily hypothalamic neurons forms the hub of a complex neuroglial network that controls reproduction in mammals by secreting the 'master molecule' gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Timely postnatal changes in GnRH expression are essential for puberty and adult fertility. Here we report that a multilayered microRNA-operated switch with built-in feedback governs increased GnRH expression during the infantile-to-juvenile transition and that impairing microRNA synthesis in GnRH neurons leads to hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and infertility in mice. Two essential components of this switch, miR-200 and miR-155, respectively regulate Zeb1, a repressor of Gnrh transcriptional activators and Gnrh itself, and Cebpb, a nitric oxide-mediated repressor of Gnrh that acts both directly and through Zeb1, in GnRH neurons. This alteration in the delicate balance between inductive and repressive signals induces the normal GnRH-fuelled run-up to correct puberty initiation, and interfering with this process disrupts the neuroendocrine control of reproduction. ? 2016 Nature Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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Keywords
Gonadorelin, Microrna, Aging, Animal, C57Bl Mouse, Fertility, Genetics, Hypogonadism, Hypothalamus, Metabolism, Physiology, Reproduction, Sexual Maturation, Transgenic Mouse, Aging, Animals, Fertility, Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone, Hypogonadism, Hypothalamus, Mice, Inbred C57Bl, Mice, Transgenic, Micrornas, Reproduction, Sexual Maturation
Citation
Messina, A., Langlet, F., Chachlaki, K., Roa, J., Rasika, S., Jouy, N., . . . Prevot, V. (2016). A microRNA switch regulates the rise in hypothalamic GnRH production before puberty. Nature Neuroscience, 19(6), 835-844. doi: 10.1038/nn.4298