MiR-19 guides the placement of new neurons in the adult brain, and the molecule is disrupted in cells from patients with schizophrenia, discovered scientists.
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‘MiR-19 guides the placement of new neurons in the adult brain, and the molecule is disrupted in cells from patients with schizophrenia.’
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"This is one of the first links between an individual microRNA and a specific process in the brain or a brain disorder," says senior author Rusty Gage, professor in Salk's Laboratory of Genetics and holder of the Vi and John Adler Chair for Research on Age-Related Neurodegenerative Disease. 
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While most RNA molecules contain the instructions for making proteins - the physical workhorses of cells - microRNAs don't encode proteins. Instead, they're active themselves, binding to other strands of RNA to block them from creating proteins. Previously, scientists have shown that levels of microRNA molecules are altered in brain disorders but not which microRNAs are responsible.
"People have broadly studied microRNAs in the brain quite a bit," says Jinju Han, a senior research associate at Salk and first author of the new paper. "But there are more than 2,000 microRNAs and only a few have been looked at in any depth."
Gage, Han and their colleagues found that levels of miR-19 changed more than levels of any other microRNA when precursors to new brain cells in these areas (called neural progenitor cells) were coaxed to become neurons in the adult brain.
"The microRNA miR-19 has been implicated in cancer and people never thought it was related to the brain," says Han. "But we saw that its levels changed quite dramatically when stem cells differentiated into neurons."
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Because the incorrect migration of new brain cells has been implicated in neuropsychiatric disorders like schizophrenia, Gage's group next analyzed the levels of miR-19 and Rapgef2 in neural progenitor cells that had been created by reprogramming skin cells from schizophrenic patients. Although the patients had no mutations in the gene for Rapgef2, they had high levels of miR-19 that corresponded with low levels of both the RNA and protein for Rapgef2. The team is now studying the role of miR-19 in mouse models of schizophrenia, as well as looking at cells from broader cohorts of human patients.
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Source-Eurekalert