ZSWIM8 destabilizes many murine microRNAs and is required for proper embryonic growth and development.

TitleZSWIM8 destabilizes many murine microRNAs and is required for proper embryonic growth and development.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsShi CY, Elcavage LE, Chivukula RR, Stefano J, Kleaveland B, Bartel DP
JournalGenome Res
Volume33
Issue9
Pagination1482-1496
Date Published2023 Sep
ISSN1549-5469
KeywordsAnimals, Embryo, Mammalian, Genome, Growth and Development, Mammals, Mice, MicroRNAs
Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) pair to sites in mRNAs to direct the degradation of these RNA transcripts. Conversely, certain RNA transcripts can direct the degradation of particular miRNAs. This target-directed miRNA degradation (TDMD) requires the ZSWIM8 E3 ubiquitin ligase. Here, we report the function of ZSWIM8 in the mouse embryo. Zswim8 -/- embryos were smaller than their littermates and died near the time of birth. This highly penetrant perinatal lethality was apparently caused by a lung sacculation defect attributed to failed maturation of alveolar epithelial cells. Some mutant individuals also had heart ventricular septal defects. These developmental abnormalities were accompanied by aberrant accumulation of more than 50 miRNAs observed across 12 tissues, which often led to enhanced repression of their mRNA targets. These ZSWIM8-sensitive miRNAs were preferentially produced from genomic miRNA clusters, and in some cases, ZSWIM8 caused a switch in the dominant strand or isoform that accumulated from a miRNA hairpin-observations suggesting that TDMD provides a mechanism to uncouple coproduced miRNAs from each other. Overall, our findings indicate that the regulatory influence of ZSWIM8, and presumably TDMD, in mammalian biology is widespread and consequential, and posit the existence of many yet-unidentified transcripts that trigger miRNA degradation.

DOI10.1101/gr.278073.123
Alternate JournalGenome Res
PubMed ID37532519
PubMed Central IDPMC10620050
Grant List / HHMI / Howard Hughes Medical Institute / United States
T32 GM007753 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM144273 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM136540 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
R35 GM118135 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
Related Faculty: 
Benjamin Kleaveland, M.D., Ph.D.

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