Cocaine induces differential circular RNA expression in striatum.
Qian BuHailei LongXue ShaoHui GuJueying KongLi LuoBin LiuWei GuoHongbo WangJingwei TianYinglan ZhaoXiaobo CenPublished in: Translational psychiatry (2019)
Circular RNA (circRNA), a novel type of endogenous non-coding RNA, plays natural miRNA sponge effect that represses the activities of corresponding miRNAs through binding with them, thus modulating transcriptional expression of genes. Recent studies indicate that circRNAs are significantly enriched in the brain and some of them are derived from synaptic protein-coding genes. In addition, miRNAs are involved in synaptic plasticity, memory formation, and cocaine addiction. However, the role of circRNAs in cocaine reward is unclear. This study aimed to investigate the expression profile of striatal circRNAs in the mice after cocaine self-administration. By using circRNA microarray analysis, we observed that 90 striatal circRNAs were differentially expressed in cocaine self-administering mice, of which 18 circRNAs were up-regulated and 72 down-regulated. Six circRNAs were selected randomly for validation by using quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, and their expression levels showed consistency with microarray analysis. We backward predicted the circRNAs and their binding sites of miRNAs associated with neuroplasticity. In functional validation test, mmu_circRNA_002381 may modulate the transcription of certain genes associated with neuroplasticity, such as limk1 and bdnf. Taken together, circRNAs may participate in cocaine behavioral effect via interacting with miRNAs. Our findings reveal a potential role of circRNAs in cocaine effect.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- binding protein
- genome wide
- gene expression
- parkinson disease
- metabolic syndrome
- mass spectrometry
- high fat diet induced
- functional connectivity
- multiple sclerosis
- risk assessment
- small molecule
- dna methylation
- stress induced
- blood brain barrier
- nucleic acid
- cerebral ischemia
- genome wide analysis