Changes in Hypothalamic Expression of the Lin28/let-7 System and Related MicroRNAs During Postnatal Maturation and After Experimental Manipulations of Puberty

Susana Sangiao‐Alvarellos(Universidade da Coruña), María Manfredi-Lozano(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Francisco Ruíz-Pino(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Vı́ctor Navarro(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Miguel A. Sánchez-Garrido(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), S. León(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Carlos Diéguez(Universidade de Santiago de Compostela), Fernando Cordido(Universidade da Coruña), Valérie Matagne(Oregon National Primate Research Center), Gregory A. Dissen(Oregon National Primate Research Center), Sergio R. Ojeda(Oregon National Primate Research Center), L. Pinilla(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), Manuel Tena‐Sempere(Instituto de Salud Carlos III)
Endocrinology
January 4, 2013
Cited by 121Open Access
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Abstract

Lin28 and Lin28b are related RNA-binding proteins that inhibit the maturation of miRNAs of the let-7 family and participate in the control of cellular stemness and early embryonic development. Considerable interest has arisen recently concerning other physiological roles of the Lin28/let-7 axis, including its potential involvement in the control of puberty, as suggested by genome-wide association studies and functional genomics. We report herein the expression profiles of Lin28 and let-7 members in the rat hypothalamus during postnatal maturation and in selected models of altered puberty. The expression patterns of c-Myc (upstream positive regulator of Lin28), mir-145 (negative regulator of c-Myc), and mir-132 and mir-9 (putative miRNA repressors of Lin28, predicted by bioinformatic algorithms) were also explored. In male and female rats, Lin28, Lin28b, and c-Myc mRNAs displayed very high hypothalamic expression during the neonatal period, markedly decreased during the infantile-to-juvenile transition and reached minimal levels before/around puberty. A similar puberty-related decline was observed for Lin28b in monkey hypothalamus but not in the rat cortex, suggesting species conservation and tissue specificity. Conversely, let-7a, let-7b, mir-132, and mir-145, but not mir-9, showed opposite expression profiles. Perturbation of brain sex differentiation and puberty, by neonatal treatment with estrogen or androgen, altered the expression ratios of Lin28/let-7 at the time of puberty. Changes in the c-Myc/Lin28b/let-7 pathway were also detected in models of delayed puberty linked to early photoperiod manipulation and, to a lesser extent, postnatal underfeeding or chronic subnutrition. Altogether, our data are the first to document dramatic changes in the expression of the Lin28/let-7 axis in the rat hypothalamus during the postnatal maturation and after different manipulations that disturb puberty, thus suggesting the potential involvement of developmental changes in hypothalamic Lin28/let-7 expression in the mechanisms permitting/leading to puberty onset.


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