Long-lived microRNA-Argonaute complexes in quiescent cells can be activated to regulate mitogenic responses.

Authors:
Olejniczak SH, La Rocca G, Gruber JJ, Thompson CB
In:
Source: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
Publication Date: (2012)
Issue: 110(1): 157-162
Research Area:
Cancer Research/Cell Biology
Platform:
4D-Nucleofector® X-Unit
Experiment
Small RNAs were transfected at 10 pM per 1 × 106 cells. Transfection of small RNAs into IL-3 DKO cells was accomplished using an Amaxa 4D-Nucleofector as follows. Cells were resuspended in Cell Line 4D-Nucleofector Solutions SF at 1 × 107 per 100 µL, added to cuvettes or 16-well Nucleocuvette strips, and transfected using program EH-100. Cells were then allowed to rest for 5 min before being transferred to prewarmed medium at a concentration of 1–2 × 106 cells per mL.
Abstract
Cellular proliferation depends on the integration of mitogenic stimuli with environmental conditions. Increasing evidence suggests that microRNAs play a regulatory role in this integration. Here we show that during periods of cellular quiescence, mature microRNAs are stabilized and stored in Argonaute protein complexes that can be activated by mitogenic stimulation to repress mitogen-stimulated targets, thus influencing subsequent cellular responses. In quiescent cells, the majority of microRNAs exist in low molecular weight, Argonaute protein-containing complexes devoid of essential components of the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). For at least 3 wk, this pool of Argonaute-associated microRNAs is stable and can be recruited into RISC complexes subsequent to mitogenic stimulation. Using several model systems, we demonstrate that stable Argonaute protein-associated small RNAs are capable of repressing mitogen-induced transcripts. Therefore, mature microRNAs may represent a previously unappreciated form of cellular memory that allows cells to retain posttranscriptional regulatory information over extended periods of cellular quiescence.