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MicroRNA
'Sponges' Could Aid Cancer Studies
Sunday, August 12, 2007
MIT
post-doc Joel Neilson, left, graduate student Margaret Ebert
and Institute Professor Phillip Sharp have developed a new
technique to study the function of microRNA that could shed
light on the genetic material's hypothesized role in cancer.
Photo
/ Donna Coveney
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MIT researchers have
developed a new way to study the function of microRNA, tiny
strands of genetic material that help regulate at least 25
percent of a cell's genes.
The new technique could shed
light on microRNA's hypothesized role in tumor development.
Malfunctions in microRNA have been linked with cancer, but very
few direct relationships have been established between specific
microRNAs and the genes they regulate.
That could change, however, now
that MIT Institute Professor Phillip Sharp and his colleagues
have found a way to inhibit the activity of microRNA by
genetically altering cells.
The technique, described in the
August 12 online issue of Nature Methods, could "provide a
tool to identify specific genes that are being regulated by
microRNAs," said Sharp.
MicroRNA consists of short
strings of about 22 nucleotides, the building blocks that make up
RNA and DNA. MicroRNA binds to messenger RNA (mRNA), preventing
it from delivering protein assembly instructions, thereby
inhibiting gene expression.
Sharp, who is affiliated with
MIT's Biology Department and Center for Cancer Research, said
microRNA exists in every cell and controls a wide range of cell
regulatory activities.
The MIT team has found a way to
block microRNA activity by tricking cells into producing a
microRNA "sponge," which soaks up microRNA and renders
it ineffective. By de-activating microRNA, researchers can
observe the resulting effects and determine which genes the
microRNA is targeting.
The new technique could shed
more light on microRNA's role in tumor development: Earlier
studies have shown that a type of microRNA known as let-7
inhibits a cancer-inducing gene called RAS. Abnormally low levels
of let-7 have been found in some types of tumor, said Sharp.
Sharp and MIT biology graduate
student Margaret Ebert, lead author of the paper, decided to
block microRNA activity by creating a gene that produces microRNA
sponges and inserting it into their target cells. Each sponge can
bind up to six microRNA molecules, but they could be engineered
to bind more.
The sponge gene also includes a
"reporter" gene that causes the cell to become
fluorescent if it has taken up the gene, so the researchers can
know for sure whether the microRNA sponge is being produced in a
particular cell.
Ebert said the new sponge
technique is an improvement over an older method that involves
blocking microRNA activity with artificially synthesized strands
of RNA, known as oligos. One advantage is the inclusion of the
reporter gene; another is that the sponge genes can be expressed
continuously, while oligos do not remain in the cell forever.
More importantly, the sponge
technique could be used to create transgenic animals that express
the sponge in all of their cells, allowing researchers to study
microRNA function at the organismal level. With such animals,
sponge genes could be designed so that the researchers can
control when and where they are expressed.
Joel Neilson, a postdoctoral
associate in the Center for Cancer Research, is also an author on
the paper. The research was funded by the National Cancer
Institute, the National Institutes of Health, a Howard Hughes
Medical Institute Predoctoral Fellowship, a Paul and Cleo
Schimmel Scholarship, and the Cancer Research Institute.
The MIT Center for Cancer
Research was founded in 1974, and is one of eight National Cancer
Institute-designated basic research centers. Its mission is to
apply the tools of basic science and technology to determine how
cancer is caused, progresses and responds to treatment.
Source:
MIT

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