|
|
|
PERSPECTIVE
1 Center for Regenerative Therapies, 01307 Dresden, Germany; 2 Max Planck Institute for Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, 01307 Dresden, Germany; 3 Biotechnology Center of the Technical University Dresden, 01307 Dresden, Germany
All adult animals are capable of maintaining their shape and function by homeostatic replacement of dying cells, but their ability to regenerate lost or damaged organs and appendages varies widely. Unfortunately for us humans, mammals are found at the lower end of the vertebrate spectrum. We can regrow large parts of the liver and pancreas, repair limited damage to skeletal muscle and peripheral nervous system, but pale in comparison with the amazing capacity of amphibia and fish to repair most organs, including lens, retina, heart muscle, and CNS, and to even regrow amputated limbs and fins. After more than 100 years of research on regenerative phenomena, it is still a mystery why these lower vertebrates can do what we cant. Nevertheless, recent research using molecular tools has been increasingly successful in uncovering the molecular mechanisms that control regeneration. A study by Yin et al. (2008)
in this issue of Genes & Development now adds microRNAs to the picture. They show that expression of many microRNAs changes during zebrafish tail fin regeneration and that FGF signaling promotes proliferation of progenitor cells in the fin by suppressing expression of microRNA-133, which inhibits translation of mps1, a kinase required for cell proliferation.
| Regenerating adult tissues retain cell plasticity |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Multiple molecular signaling cascades are implemented during regeneration |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| MicroRNAs (miRNAs) in development, cell differentiation, and tissue function |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Computational and gene expression studies have suggested that genes involved in basic cellular processes have evolved to evade miRNA regulation, while genes involved in developmental processes are enriched in miRNA sites (Farh et al. 2005
; Stark et al. 2005
; Sood et al. 2006
). The global function of miRNA can be directly tested in animals that fail to produce miRNA due to mutations in Dicer, which is essential for miRNA biosynthesis. Surprisingly, although zebrafish embryos lacking both maternally provided and zygotically produced Dicer display abnormal morphogenesis during brain, heart, and somite development, they do not show defects in early patterning or cell differentiation (Giraldez et al. 2005
). In contrast to these relatively mild phenotypes, mouse embryos lacking maternally produced Dicer do not develop beyond the first cell division (Tang et al. 2007
). However, tissue-specific deletion of Dicer in mice again indicates a role for miRNAs in morphogenesis and cell survival rather than in differentiation and patterning of the targeted tissues (Bushati and Cohen 2007
). Based on such evidence and on the low number of miRNA mutants identified in forward genetic screens in Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila, it has been suggested that the functions of many miRNAs are rather subtle (Bushati and Cohen 2007
).
Intuitively, it makes sense to assume that dramatic cell fate decisions and functional switches are regulated by changes in gene transcription and that an additional post-transcriptional layer of regulation by miRNAs primarily serves to fine-tune and stabilize expression profiles. Indeed, miR-430 is required to balance expression of the Nodal agonist squint and its antagonist lefty during early zebrafish development (Choi et al. 2007
). On the other hand, functional analysis of individual miRNAs has also identified some whose loss causes dramatic phenotypes, since they are involved in developmental decision making. For example, the first miRNAs identified, lin-4 and lin-7 in C. elegans, are required to progress from the first to the second larval stage (Lee et al. 1993
; Wightman et al. 1993
; Reinhart et al. 2000
). miR-1 and miR-133 are known to play important roles during muscle differentiation and proliferation. miR-1 is required for myoblast differentiation, likely because it targets histone deacetylase 4, a repressor of muscle differentiation, while miR-133 promotes myoblast proliferation by repressing serum response factor (Chen et al. 2006
). Knockout of one of the two miR-1 genes in mice results in defects in heart morphogenesis and cardiac cell cycle, thus confirming a role for miR-1 in muscle development in vivo (Zhao et al. 2007
).
It is conceivable that the limited number of miRNAs whose function has been studied so far is biased toward those that cause dramatic, and thus easily recognizable, effects. Clearly, more studies are required to determine whether these miRNAs are an exception or whether animals use miRNAs more commonly, not just for conferring robustness to cellular decisions, but also for making choices.
| A role of miR-133 in regeneration |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Initially, Yin et al. (2008)
obtain an overview of miRNA regulation during regeneration using microarrays and Northern blotting, finding that dozens of miRNAs are induced during regeneration, and a smaller number of miRNAs are down-regulated. Expression of miRNAs has been reported before in regenerating newt lens and inner ear (Tsonis et al. 2007
), where the evidence of cellular dedifferentiation and transdifferentiation is stronger than for the fish fin. In the newt lens, differentiated pigmented epithelial cells from the dorsal iris give rise to lens fibers (Tsonis and Del Rio-Tsonis 2004
). The Tsonis study (Tsonis and Del Rio-Tsonis 2004
) found little overlap between the miRNAs that are up- or down-regulated in regenerating lens and inner-ear hair cells, except for members of the let-7 family of miRNAs, which were down-regulated during the dedifferentiation phase of regeneration in both tissues. It would be interesting to see whether these miRNAs are down-regulated in zebrafish tail fin regeneration as well. In the current study, Yin et al. (2008)
do not describe the miRNA regulation data in detail, but instead focus on a subset of miRNAs that is altered after inhibiting FGF signaling during regeneration. In particular, Yin et al. (2008)
target their functional studies to miR-133, which is present at high levels in uninjured fins, but strongly down-regulated in the blastema-forming phase of fin regeneration and kept at low levels throughout further regeneration.
Recently, a number of tools to intervene with miRNA function have been developed. Here, Yin et al. (2008)
use these tools in combination with electroporation into the fin to up- and down-regulate miR-133 during regeneration. Overexpression of miR-133 duplexes during the outgrowth phase of fin regeneration, after the blastema has formed, results in reduced fin growth. This indicates that miR-133 acts as an inhibitor of regeneration. Indeed, Yin et al. (2008)
find that further reducing the already low levels of miRNA-133 during regeneration by using an antisense morpholino oligonucleotide causes slightly faster regenerate growth. Together, these data indicate that down-regulation of miR-133 after amputation is required for efficient regeneration to occur. What then causes down-regulation of miR-133 expression? Yin et al. (2008)
find that inhibition of FGF signaling by heat-shock-inducible overexpression of a dominant-negative FGF receptor during regenerative outgrowth up-regulates miR-133 expression within a few hours. As described above, FGF signaling is required for fin regeneration; thus, if miR-133 is an important negative target of FGF signaling during regeneration, knockdown of miR-133 might rescue the defects caused by FGF pathway inhibition. Indeed, Yin et al. (2008)
find that electroporation of the miR-133 morpholino allows FGF-inhibited fins to grow significantly faster than control morpholino electroporation does. It is interesting that in previous work Poss and colleagues (Lee et al. 2005
) implicated FGF signaling in modulating blastema growth rate along the proximal–distal axis of the zebrafish fin. When fins are cut close to the base they grow at an accelerated rate compared with fins cut close to the tip. This difference seems to correlate with the expression level of FGF targets. It would now be important to know whether miR-133 is also differentially down-regulated in a position-dependent manner during regeneration in this in vivo example of growth control.
How does miRNA-133 inhibit regenerative outgrowth? Yin et al. (2008)
find that knockdown of miR-133 partially rescues blastemal cell proliferation after FGF pathway inhibition. It also rescues expression of several marker genes that are down-regulated by FGF inhibition, including the homeobox transcription factor msxb, which is specifically expressed in blastema cells and implicated in repression of progenitor cell differentiation (Poss et al. 2003
). Thus, miR-133 at least partially mediates the effects of FGF signaling on proliferation of blastema cells and maintenance of their identity. The effects of miR-133 on expression of msxb and the other tested markers appear to be indirect, since the 3'UTRs of these genes lack predicted miR-133-binding sites.
| Mps1 kinase is an in vivo target of miR-133 |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Having found that mps1 RNA contains one potential target site for miR-133, Yin et al. (2008)
test whether miR-133 can regulate mps1 using sensor assays in zebrafish embryos. GFP expression from a RNA construct containing the mps1 3'UTR can indeed be suppressed by coinjection of miR-133 duplexes, and the predicted miR-133-binding site is required for this inhibition. Sensor RNA abundance did not change in these experiments, indicating that miR-133 regulates translation, but not stability of mps1 RNA. Interestingly, however, in regenerating fins, mps1 RNA levels are reduced after inhibition of FGF signaling, and knockdown of miR-133 can rescue this effect. Whether this discrepancy between the effects on the artificial sensor RNA in embryos and on the endogenous gene in fins reflects tissue-specific differences in miR-133 function or whether it is due to the different assays used, remains unresolved. Due to the difficulties in achieving consistent and nonmosaic delivery of RNA or DNA molecules by currently available electroporation protocols, Yin et al. (2008)
did not perform sensor assays in the regenerating fin. Thus, conclusive evidence that miR-133 regulates mps1 expression via translational inhibition and/or RNA destabilization in the regenerating fin in vivo has to await the establishment of transgenic fish containing sensor constructs or the development of antibodies that recognize zebrafish Mps1 protein.
| What is the significance and specificity of miR-133 in regenerative outgrowth? |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Is FGF regulation of mps1 via miR-133 specific for the regenerating fin or does this interaction also occur in other tissues and systems? Fin and limb regeneration can be viewed as a redevelopment of the structure, and it is known that some molecular regulatory logic and gene activities are shared between these two processes. FGF signaling, for example, is essential for both limb and fin development. It would thus be particularly interesting to test whether miR-133 functions downstream from FGF signaling during appendage development and whether it targets mps1 in this process. So far, expression of miR-133 during zebrafish embryogenesis has been detected in the musculature of the body, head, and fins (Wienholds et al. 2005
), but detailed mapping of the expression pattern in the developing fin is required to determine whether it is down-regulated in proliferative zones as predicted if it has a similar role as during adult fin regeneration. Yin et al. (2008)
report that the adult zebrafish heart expresses high levels of miR-133. Intriguingly, mps1 is also required for heart regeneration (Poss et al. 2002b
), raising the possibility that miR-133 down-regulation and subsequent activation of mps1 expression are also prerequisites for cardiomyocyte expansion during zebrafish heart regeneration. In mammals, the heart does not regenerate, since injury does not activate cardiomyocyte proliferation but rather results in cardiac hypertrophy (Murry et al. 2006
). In mouse, miR-133 was found to inhibit cardiac hypertrophy, and remarkably, knockdown of miR-133 by infusion of an antisense oligo was sufficient to cause sustained hypertrophy (Care et al. 2007
). It is therefore possible that miR-133 is required to suppress cardiomyocyte activation in both the zebrafish and mammalian heart, but perhaps it regulates different targets, which might help explain why zebrafish hearts can regenerate, while mammalian hearts cannot. The context-specific functions of miR-133 are likely to be an important consideration for future studies since, for example, miR-133 promotes proliferation of mouse skeletal myoblasts in culture (Chen et al. 2006
), whereas Yin et al. (2008)
show that it inhibits cell proliferation in the fish fin.
| Are miRNAs a means of retaining growth potential in adult tissue? |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Are miRNAs merely required to fine-tune gene expression programs during regeneration, or are they major instructive factors? The latter might be true for miR-133. Yin et al. (2008)
show that loss of miR-133 is sufficient to rescue the cell proliferation defects caused by inhibiting FGF signaling to a significant extent. This experimental result might actually underestimate the importance of miR-133 as an FGF effector because the miR-133 knockdown was most likely a partial phenotype due to the generally incomplete gene knockdown by morpholino electroporation into the fin. Clearly, more studies are needed to test whether loss of other miRNAs produces significant phenotypes and whether miRNAs play roles in cell dedifferentiation and cell fate decisions during regeneration.
An interesting speculation is that regulation of gene expression by post-transcriptional mechanisms might aid in maintaining the plasticity of regenerating tissues. Many regenerative processes are known or assumed to involve dedifferentiation of cells into progenitors that can give rise to other differentiated cell types. Thus, in order to maintain such plasticity, tissues that are competent to regenerate might have to avoid mechanisms of transcriptional regulation that are difficult to erase, such as chromatin modifications, and instead rely on post-transcriptional mechanisms of gene regulation. Maybe fins need to ensure that genes required for regeneration, such as mps1, are accessible for fast up-regulation in the event of wounding. One way to assure this might be to shield these genes from silencing chromatin modifications, although this increases the risk of detrimental effects from leaky expression in noninjured tissue. Hence the need to repress expression of such genes by miRNAs in the noninjured tissue. An interesting experiment along these lines would be to assess the consequences of miR-133 knockdown in nonamputated fins. Considering that mps1 expression cannot be detected at the RNA level in nonamputated fins (Poss et al. 2002a
), it is worth determining whether this regulation is due to repression by miR-133.
Adult zebrafish clearly retain tissue plasticity even under nonregenerative conditions, as they display indeterminate growth—becoming larger if they are put in a bigger tank. In a separate study, Poss and colleagues (Wills et al. 2008
) utilized the heart model to explore some of the cellular processes underlying tissue regulation. When zebrafish are transferred into growth conditions, cells in various heart compartments begin to proliferate, which includes the production of new cardiomyocytes. Using overexpression of the dominant-negative FGF receptor, Wills et al. (2008)
showed that this signaling pathway is involved in cardiac homeostasis. It would not be surprising if the FGF/miR-133/mps1 pathway also acts in this scenario. The miRNAs may well be important for repressing proliferation, but maintaining the potential to proliferate and activate embryonic gene programs in adult tissues, or subsets of cells within mature tissues, to allow growth and regeneration. It will be fascinating to see whether the mechanisms of tissue homeostasis seen in zebrafish and other indeterminate growers are common or distinct to the mechanisms found in every vertebrate.
A specific hypothesis would be to investigate whether miRNAs represent important points of evolutionary change that determine different growth control traits and whether this knowledge can be used to confer more tissue plasticity to other vertebrate tissues.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
E-MAIL gilbert.weidinger{at}biotec.tu-dresden.de; FAX 0049-351-463-40348. ![]()
Article is online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1660508.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Beck, C.W., Christen, B., Barker, D., and Slack, J.M. 2006. Temporal requirement for bone morphogenetic proteins in regeneration of the tail and limb of Xenopus tadpoles. Mech. Dev. 123: 674–688.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bushati, N. and Cohen, S.M. 2007. microRNA functions. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 23: 175–205.[CrossRef][Medline]
Care, A., Catalucci, D., Felicetti, F., Bonci, D., Addario, A., Gallo, P., Bang, M.L., Segnalini, P., Gu, Y., Dalton, N.D., et al. 2007. MicroRNA-133 controls cardiac hypertrophy. Nat. Med. 13: 613–618.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chen, J.F., Mandel, E.M., Thomson, J.M., Wu, Q., Callis, T.E., Hammond, S.M., Conlon, F.L., and Wang, D.Z. 2006. The role of microRNA-1 and microRNA-133 in skeletal muscle proliferation and differentiation. Nat. Genet. 38: 228–233.[CrossRef][Medline]
Choi, W.Y., Giraldez, A.J., and Schier, A.F. 2007. Target protectors reveal dampening and balancing of Nodal agonist and antagonist by miR-430. Science 318: 271–274.
DJamoos, C.A., McMahon, G., and Tsonis, P.A. 1998. Fibroblast growth factor receptors regulate the ability for hindlimb regeneration in Xenopus laevis. Wound Repair Regen. 6: 388–397.[CrossRef][Medline]
Farh, K.K., Grimson, A., Jan, C., Lewis, B.P., Johnston, W.K., Lim, L.P., Burge, C.B., and Bartel, D.P. 2005. The widespread impact of mammalian microRNAs on mRNA repression and evolution. Science 310: 1817–1821.
Fisk, H.A., Mattison, C.P., and Winey, M. 2004. A field guide to the Mps1 family of protein kinases. Cell Cycle 3: 439–442.[Medline]
Giraldez, A.J., Cinalli, R.M., Glasner, M.E., Enright, A.J., Thomson, J.M., Baskerville, S., Hammond, S.M., Bartel, D.P., and Schier, A.F. 2005. MicroRNAs regulate brain morphogenesis in zebrafish. Science 308: 833–838.
Halder, G., Callaerts, P., and Gehring, W.J. 1995. Induction of ectopic eyes by targeted expression of the eyeless gene in Drosophila. Science 267: 1788–1792.
Jazwinska, A., Badakov, R., and Keating, M.T. 2007. Activin-βA signaling is required for zebrafish fin regeneration. Curr. Biol. 17: 1390–1395.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kawakami, Y., Rodriguez Esteban, C., Raya, M., Kawakami, H., Marti, M., Dubova, I., and Izpisua Belmonte, J.C. 2006. Wnt/β-catenin signaling regulates vertebrate limb regeneration. Genes & Dev. 20: 3232–3237.
Kim, J., Inoue, K., Ishii, J., Vanti, W.B., Voronov, S.V., Murchison, E., Hannon, G., and Abeliovich, A. 2007. A microRNA feedback circuit in midbrain dopamine neurons. Science 317: 1220–1224.
Lee, R.C., Feinbaum, R.L., and Ambros, V. 1993. The C. elegans heterochronic gene lin-4 encodes small RNAs with antisense complementarity to lin-14. Cell 75: 843–854.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lee, Y., Grill, S., Sanchez, A., Murphy-Ryan, M., and Poss, K.D. 2005. Fgf signaling instructs position-dependent growth rate during zebrafish fin regeneration. Development 132: 5173–5183.
Lévesque, M., Gatien, S., Finnson, K., Desmeules, S., Villiard, E., Pilote, M., Philip, A., and Roy, S. 2007. Transforming growth factor: β signaling is essential for limb regeneration in axolotls. PloS ONE 2: e1227. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone/0001227.[CrossRef]
Murry, C.E., Reinecke, H., and Pabon, L.M. 2006. Regeneration gaps: Observations on stem cells and cardiac repair. J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 47: 1777–1785.
Nechiporuk, A. and Keating, M.T. 2002. A proliferation gradient between proximal and msxb-expressing distal blastema directs zebrafish fin regeneration. Development 129: 2607–2617.
Poss, K.D., Shen, J., Nechiporuk, A., McMahon, G., Thisse, B., Thisse, C., and Keating, M.T. 2000. Roles for Fgf signaling during zebrafish fin regeneration. Dev. Biol. 222: 347–358.[CrossRef][Medline]
Poss, K.D., Nechiporuk, A., Hillam, A.M., Johnson, S.L., and Keating, M.T. 2002a. Mps1 defines a proximal blastemal proliferative compartment essential for zebrafish fin regeneration. Development 129: 5141–5149.[Medline]
Poss, K.D., Wilson, L.G., and Keating, M.T. 2002b. Heart regeneration in zebrafish. Science 298: 2188–2190.
Poss, K.D., Keating, M.T., and Nechiporuk, A. 2003. Tales of regeneration in zebrafish. Dev. Dyn. 226: 202–210.[CrossRef][Medline]
Reinhart, B.J., Slack, F.J., Basson, M., Pasquinelli, A.E., Bettinger, J.C., Rougvie, A.E., Horvitz, H.R., and Ruvkun, G. 2000. The 21-nucleotide let-7 RNA regulates developmental timing in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 403: 901–906.[CrossRef][Medline]
Slack, J.M. 2006. Amphibian muscle regeneration—Dedifferentiation or satellite cells? Trends Cell Biol. 16: 273–275.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sood, P., Krek, A., Zavolan, M., Macino, G., and Rajewsky, N. 2006. Cell-type-specific signatures of microRNAs on target mRNA expression. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 103: 2746–2751.
Stark, A., Brennecke, J., Bushati, N., Russell, R.B., and Cohen, S.M. 2005. Animal microRNAs confer robustness to gene expression and have a significant impact on 3'UTR evolution. Cell 123: 1133–1146.[CrossRef][Medline]
Stoick-Cooper, C.L., Moon, R.T., and Weidinger, G. 2007a. Advances in signaling in vertebrate regeneration as a prelude to regenerative medicine. Genes & Dev. 21: 1292–1315.
Stoick-Cooper, C.L., Weidinger, G., Riehle, K.J., Hubbert, C., Major, M.B., Fausto, N., and Moon, R.T. 2007b. Distinct Wnt signaling pathways have opposing roles in appendage regeneration. Development 134: 479–489.
Tanaka, E.M. 2003. Cell differentiation and cell fate during urodele tail and limb regeneration. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 13: 497–501.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tang, F., Kaneda, M., OCarroll, D., Hajkova, P., Barton, S.C., Sun, Y.A., Lee, C., Tarakhovsky, A., Lao, K., and Surani, M.A. 2007. Maternal microRNAs are essential for mouse zygotic development. Genes & Dev. 21: 644–648.
Tsonis, P.A. and Del Rio-Tsonis, K. 2004. Lens and retina regeneration: Transdifferentiation, stem cells and clinical applications. Exp. Eye Res. 78: 161–172.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tsonis, P.A., Call, M.K., Grogg, M.W., Sartor, M.A., Taylor, R.R., Forge, A., Fyffe, R., Goldenberg, R., Cowper-Sal-lari, R., and Tomlinson, C.R. 2007. MicroRNAs and regeneration: Let-7 members as potential regulators of dedifferentiation in lens and inner ear hair cell regeneration of the adult newt. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 362: 940–945.[CrossRef][Medline]
Whitehead, G.G., Makino, S., Lien, C.L., and Keating, M.T. 2005. fgf20 is essential for initiating zebrafish fin regeneration. Science 310: 1957–1960.
Wienholds, E., Kloosterman, W.P., Miska, E., Alvarez-Saavedra, E., Berezikov, E., de Bruijn, E., Horvitz, H.R., Kauppinen, S., and Plasterk, R.H. 2005. MicroRNA expression in zebrafish embryonic development. Science 309: 310–311.
Wightman, B., Ha, I., and Ruvkun, G. 1993. Posttranscriptional regulation of the heterochronic gene lin-14 by lin-4 mediates temporal pattern formation in C. elegans. Cell 75: 855–862.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wills, A.A., Holdway, J.E., Major, R.J., and Poss, K.D. 2008. Regulated addition of new myocardial and epicardial cells fosters homeostatic cardiac growth and maintenance in adult zebrafish. Development 135: 183–192.
Yin, V.P., Thomson, J.M., Thummel, R., Hyde, D.R., Hammond, S.M., and Poss, K.D. 2008. Fgf-dependent depletion of microRNA-133 promotes appendage regeneration in zebrafish. Genes & Dev. (this issue) doi: 10.1101/gad.1641808.
Yokoyama, H., Ogino, H., Stoick-Cooper, C.L., Grainger, R.M., and Moon, R.T. 2007. Wnt/β-catenin signaling has an essential role in the initiation of limb regeneration. Dev. Biol. 306: 170–178.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhao, Y., Ransom, J.F., Li, A., Vedantham, V., von Drehle, M., Muth, A.N., Tsuchihashi, T., McManus, M.T., Schwartz, R.J., and Srivastava, D. 2007. Dysregulation of cardiogenesis, cardiac conduction, and cell cycle in mice lacking miRNA-1-2. Cell 129: 303–317.[CrossRef][Medline]
Related Article
![]()
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
Genes & Dev. 2008 22: 728-733.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||