Antisense long non-coding RNA in peripheral nervous system (PNS) biology

Antisense long non-coding RNA in peripheral nervous system (PNS) biology


Scientists may have identified a new opening to intervene in the process of healing peripheral nerve damage with the discovery that an "anti-sense" RNA (AS-RNA) is expressed when nerves are injured. Their experiments in mice show that the AS-RNA helps to regulate how damaged nerves rebuild their coating of myelin, which, like the cladding around a cable or wire, is crucial for making nerves efficient conductors.

The senior author of the study in Cell Reports, said the team was able to control expression of the AS-RNA in the lab and therefore the transcription factor Egr2 that prompts myelin-building Schwann cells into action.

"Even though Schwann cells are able to re-myelinate the peripheral nerves after injury, this re-myelination is almost never complete and the functionality of the nerve is usually not restored to the levels prior to injury," said the senior author. "Since the AS-RNA inhibits the expression of Egr2, which is the central transcriptional regulator of myelin genes, it is possible that inhibiting or regulating the levels of the AS-RNA will enhance the transcription of myelin related genes and hence myelination."

Authors were not only able to find the AS-RNA but also in a series of experiments described in the paper, they found that its expression increases markedly and with specific timing after sciatic nerve injury.

They also demonstrated the effect it has, which is to inhibit Egr2 and therefore guide Schwann cells to demyelinate the nerve. After nerve injury, the cells remove the myelin, guide new nerve growth and then remyelinate the regrown nerve. The AS-RNA appears to take on the role of promoting that first step by initiating demyelination and preventing premature re-myelination. Later, when new nerve growth has occurred, the AS-RNA expression dies down to allow the re-myelination to occur.

In further experiments the team learned which molecules stimulate the expression of the AS-RNA and they also successfully interfered with its activity, which delayed demyelination.

"The antisense RNA that we discovered is an attractive target for therapeutic interventions since inhibition of the AS-RNA rescues the expression of Egr2, which is the main transcription factor that regulates peripheral myelination," senior author said. "This therapy could apply to nerve injury repair and peripheral demyelinating neuropathies."

To make that happen, the lab is now looking into new research questions. Biopsies of humans with demyelination disorders such as congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy will help the team learn how AS-RNA works and possibly becomes disrupted in people. Meanwhile, the scientists want to further study ways to regulate AS-RNA expression and to do so with the right timing and amount to promote, rather than disrupt, healing.

http://news.brown.edu/articles/2017/08/nerves

http://www.cell.com/cell-reports/fulltext/S2211-1247(17)31061-6

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