Regulation of cellular sterol homeostasis by the oxygen responsive noncoding RNA lincNORS.
Xue WuCristina M NiculiteMihai Bogdan PredaAnnalisa RossiToma TebaldiElena ButoiMattie K WhiteOana M TudoranDaniela N PetruscaAmber S JannaschWilliam P BoneXingyue ZongFang FangAlexandrina BurlacuMichelle T PaulsenBrad A HancockGeorge E SanduskySumegha MitraMelissa L FishelAaron BuechleinCristina IvanSpyros OikonomopoulosMyriam GorospeAmber L MosleyMilan RadovichUtpal P DavéJiannis RagoussisKenneth P NephewBernard MariAlan McIntyreHeiko KonigMats LjungmanDiana L CousminerPaolo MacchiMircea IvanPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
We hereby provide the initial portrait of lincNORS, a spliced lincRNA generated by the MIR193BHG locus, entirely distinct from the previously described miR-193b-365a tandem. While inducible by low O2 in a variety of cells and associated with hypoxia in vivo, our studies show that lincNORS is subject to multiple regulatory inputs, including estrogen signals. Biochemically, this lincRNA fine-tunes cellular sterol/steroid biosynthesis by repressing the expression of multiple pathway components. Mechanistically, the function of lincNORS requires the presence of RALY, an RNA-binding protein recently found to be implicated in cholesterol homeostasis. We also noticed the proximity between this locus and naturally occurring genetic variations highly significant for sterol/steroid-related phenotypes, in particular the age of sexual maturation. An integrative analysis of these variants provided a more formal link between these phenotypes and lincNORS, further strengthening the case for its biological relevance.
Keyphrases
- binding protein
- induced apoptosis
- poor prognosis
- copy number
- long non coding rna
- cell proliferation
- cell cycle arrest
- air pollution
- genome wide association study
- transcription factor
- nucleic acid
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- mental health
- long noncoding rna
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- low density lipoprotein
- estrogen receptor
- signaling pathway
- cell death