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Alex Palazzo is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biochemistry at The University of Toronto.


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« Saturday Morning Video - Victim of the Brain | Main | Science and the Public »

Let7 miRNAs, Lin-28, Cancer and Stem Cells

Category: Pure Biology
Posted on: March 24, 2008 5:05 PM, by Alex Palazzo

Last past week was incredible. A slew of very important papers stemming from basic science and having deep impacts on cancer and stem cells came out in Nature and Science. Both stories came from labs here at Harvard Medical School, and everyone's been talking about both papers. The first story is complicated - but I wanted to use it to give a history of one aspect of cancer research. I have already written a two part intro into the topic (here and here). The other story, which was presented at last week's New England RNA Data Club, is now available online, I'll sum up the incredible discovery below the fold.

This whole project was initiated by Srini Viswanathan a grad student in the Daley and Richard labs here at HMS. I heard that the whole project took three or four months from conception to manuscript.

Background: (For more on miRNAs click here.) miRNAs come in families. The members of each family are nearly identical to eachother and target similar transcripts for silencing and/or destruction.

When a miRNA is transcribed it is made at a long stem loop in the nucleus. An enzyme named Drosha cleaves the loose ends off of the stem loop. The shorter, half-processed miRNA is then exported to the cytoplasm where the loop is chopped off by Dicer. One strand is then loaded into the RISC complex and is used to inhibit translation and/or degrade an mRNA.

It had been noted by many researchers that the let7 family of miRNAs are inhibited in most cancer cell lines and in stem cells. It turns out that embryonic stem cells cells make plenty of let7 precursors that remain unprocessed. So what's the mechanism? It appears as if the stem loop of the let7 miRNAs aren't properly processed by Drosha. Knowing all this, Srini developed an assay to measure miRNA processing. He isolated a factor that inhibits Drosha from ES cell extracts that turned out to be a known protein called Lin-28. The curious part is that this protein only prevents the processing of the let7 family of miRNAs. We're not sure why this is.

Now why is this so amazing?

Remember all those papers on iPS (induce pluripotent stem) cells? Two years ago the Yamanaka group figured out that if you expressed 4 transcription factors in mouse skin cells, you can convert the cells into iPS cells. A year later the results were repeated in human cells. At the same time the Thomson group demonstrated that you could express a different set of proteins to get the same reprogramming event. Two of the Thomson factors were identical to the genes expressed by Yamanaka (Sox2 and Oct 3/4), one of the new genes encoded another transcription factor known to be important for stem cell generation (Nanog) and the last gene encoded an RNA binding protein named ... Lin-28.

Yes, you need to inhibit a specific family of miRNAs to reprogram your cells. Amazing.

Ref:
Srinivas R. Viswanathan, George Q. Daley, and Richard I. Gregory
Selective Blockade of MicroRNA Processing by Lin-28
Published online February 21 2008; doi:10.1126/science.1154040 (Science Express)

Comments

1

Sounds interesting but your paper links are to the Harvard server...

Posted by: bayman | March 24, 2008 5:48 PM

2

Sorry about that. I fixed it.

Posted by: Alex Palazzo | March 24, 2008 7:20 PM

3

Nice to see some sanity at ScienceBlogs these days...I might be going over the paper some time soon, it sounds really interesting. It looks like it was posted ahead of print, but I can access it through my university's library.

Posted by: steppen wolf | March 24, 2008 7:42 PM

4

It's definitely exciting stuff; people in my lab were quite excited by both stories!

Posted by: such.ire | March 24, 2008 9:37 PM

5

Thank you very much for this clear and concise explanation -- I am learning a lot from this series.

Memo to ScienceBorg(TM) overlords: Get more bloggers like Alex.

Posted by: Neuro-conservative | March 24, 2008 11:31 PM

6

Thanks Alex. This is really cool.

3-4 months?? They must either be incredibly lucky, or slogged their asses off. I suspect the latter.

Posted by: MadGenius | March 25, 2008 4:29 AM

7

I would not underestimate luck - this probably means that most of their experiments, if not all of them, worked out fine right away!

Posted by: steppen wolf | March 25, 2008 12:22 PM

8

interesting... I just did a class presentation this afternoon on miR373 and mir520c as promoters of metastasis (Nature Cell Biology, Jan 13 2008). Long story short, they mentioned that there is an inverse relationship between CD44 and miR373.... Someone in my class pointed out that CD44 is a breast cancer stem cell marker... I wonder if this is something that can be looked into further? I'm not making sense...

Anyway, just a random thought that has not much to do with your post. I'm just starting out as a PhD student in Cell biology after all... ;)

Posted by: cc | March 25, 2008 10:38 PM

9

Thank you very much for this clear and concise explenation

Posted by: kanser | March 30, 2008 10:02 AM

10

I have heard a very similar Let7 processing story at least one year ago from a graduate student in my department. His story was in the process of revision and got rejected immediately after the science paper was online......

Posted by: anonymous | April 8, 2008 1:26 AM

11

That's funny, a couple of days ago I heard about the existence of another group with the same data but they got scooped. Must be the same folks. That really sucks.

Posted by: Alex Palazzo | April 8, 2008 7:19 AM

12

yes. its called stealing.

Posted by: anonymous | November 19, 2009 9:01 AM

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