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Activity-associated miRNA are packaged in Map1b-enriched exosomes released from depolarized neurons

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posted on 2025-05-09, 09:12 authored by Belinda J. Goldie, Matthew DunMatthew Dun, Minjie Lin, Nathan SmithNathan Smith, Nicole VerrillsNicole Verrills, Christopher DayasChristopher Dayas, Murray CairnsMurray Cairns
Rapid input-restricted change in gene expression is an important aspect of synaptic plasticity requiring complex mechanisms of post-transcriptional mRNA trafficking and regulation. Small non-coding miRNA are uniquely poised to support these functions by providing a nucleic-acid-based specificity component for universal-sequence-dependent RNA binding complexes. We investigated the subcellular distribution of these molecules in resting and potassium chloride depolarized human neuroblasts, and found both selective enrichment and depletion in neurites. Depolarization was associated with a neurite-restricted decrease in miRNA expression; a subset of these molecules was recovered from the depolarization medium in nuclease resistant extracellular exosomes. These vesicles were enriched with primate specific miRNA and the synaptic-plasticity-associated protein MAP1b. These findings further support a role for miRNA as neural plasticity regulators, as they are compartmentalized in neurons and undergo activity-associated redistribution or release into the extracellular matrix.

Funding

NHMRC

APP1067137

History

Journal title

Nucleic Acids Research

Volume

42

Issue

14

Pagination

9195-9208

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

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