Individual
small RNAs are responsible for controlling the expression of gonadoliberin or
GnRH (Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone), a neurohormone that controls sexual
maturation, the appearance of puberty, and fertility in adults. This has just
been demonstrated by the "Development and Plasticity of the Neuroendocrine
Brain" team led by Vincent Prévot, Inserm Research Director (Jean-Pierre
Aubert Research Centre, Lille). The involvement of microRNAs, transcribed from
DNA, occurs around birth, and marks a key step in postnatal development.
Failure of these microRNAs to act leads to the disruption or even total
cessation of GnRH production by the hypothalamic neurons that synthesise it,
and hence to infertility. In the most serious cases, sterility may result. Details
of this work in mice are published in the 2 May 2016 issue of the journal Nature
Neuroscience.
Reproductive
function is determined by events that take place in the brain. Gametogenesis
(the production of spermatozoa and oocytes) and the secretion of hormones by
the ovaries and testes are heavily dependent on the hypophysis, a small gland
located below the brain, to which it is connected by a capillary network. The
latter is in turn controlled by a glandular "orchestra conductor"
located at the base of the brain, the hypothalamus. During postnatal
development, activation of a small number of highly specialised neurons (the
GnRH neurons) in the hypothalamus leads to the synthesis of a hormone,
gonadoliberin or GnRH (Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone), and this process leads
to the appearance of puberty.
This
step, known as "mini-puberty" constitutes the first activation of the
reproductive axis by the brain. It occurs between the first and third months of
life of the infant, and is important to the correct course of sexual
maturation. At puberty, GnRH stimulates the synthesis by the hypophysis of
other hormones, which in turn enter the bloodstream to promote the growth of
the gonads (ovaries and testes), and to subsequently ensure reproductive
function.
The
appearance of puberty remains one of the greatest scientific enigmas of the
21st century. In the last 30 years, the discovery of mutations in various parts
of the genome in patients with disorders of puberty has made it possible to
identify some genes involved in this process.
However,
physicians and scientists believe that these genes are responsible for only a
third of the disorders of puberty encountered in patients. The discovery of the
involvement of microRNAs opens up considerable prospects for the medical
management of these patients, from both a diagnostic and therapeutic point of
view.
MicroRNAs
are small non-coding RNAs transcribed from our DNA. In contrast to messenger
RNAs (mRNA), they are not translated into proteins. Because of this, microRNAs are
not part of the "coding genome," but constitute what some people call
the epigenome. Regulation of gene expression, e.g. expression of the GnRH gene,
by microRNAs is therefore considered "epigenetic" regulation.
Research
conducted in mice by Vincent Prévot's team shows that birth induces a radical
change in the expression of microRNAs in the hypothalamic GnRH neurons. This
modification of the microRNA expression profile is essential to the inhibition
of the expression of transcription factors (proteins that activate or inhibit
gene expression) that have a repressive effect on GnRH expression. This
inhibition of inhibitory factors allows increased production of GnRH, which is
indispensable to infantile and juvenile sexual maturation, and the occurrence of
puberty. Indeed, in the absence of microRNAs, the expression of transcription
factors that inhibit GnRH expression increases, and leads to the extinction
of GnRH synthesis in the brain, leading to the arrest of sexual maturation, absence of puberty, and complete sterility
in adult individuals. Analysis of the GnRH gene in humans shows that analogous
phenomena might occur in our own species. The mechanism elucidated by this team
might therefore explain the absence of puberty
and the occurrence of infertility in some patients for whom no mutation or
polymorphism (variation in DNA sequence) has been identified in the coding
genome.
In
terms of diagnosis, the study carried out by Vincent Prévot's team in Lille
shows the interest of analysing DNA segments from which microRNAs are
transcribed, as well as the genome segments that encode their binding sites on
the target genes. "The work published today shows the importance of
studying the genome sequences that will be transcribed into mRNA molecules, to
which microRNAs bind in order to regulate their translation into protein,"
add the researchers.
From
a therapeutic standpoint, the interaction of microRNAs with the genes they
regulate may be prevented or mimicked by the administration of small analogous
molecules, for which the study done by Vincent Prévot's team provides proof of
concept.
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-05-fertility-player.html
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