Haematologica (Apr 2017)

Erythrocyte survival is controlled by microRNA-142

  • Natalia Rivkin,
  • Elik Chapnik,
  • Alexander Mildner,
  • Gregory Barshtein,
  • Ziv Porat,
  • Elena Kartvelishvily,
  • Tali Dadosh,
  • Yehudit Birger,
  • Gail Amir,
  • Saul Yedgar,
  • Shai Izraeli,
  • Steffen Jung,
  • Eran Hornstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2016.156109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102, no. 4

Abstract

Read online

Hematopoietic–specific microRNA-142 is a critical regulator of various blood cell lineages, but its role in erythrocytes is unexplored. Herein, we characterize the impact of microRNA-142 on erythrocyte physiology and molecular cell biology, using a mouse loss-of-function allele. We report that microRNA-142 is required for maintaining the typical erythrocyte biconcave shape and structural resilience, for the normal metabolism of reactive oxygen species, and for overall lifespan. microRNA-142 further controls ACTIN filament homeostasis and membrane skeleton organization. The analyses presented reveal previously unappreciated functions of microRNA-142 and contribute to an emerging view of small RNAs as key players in erythropoiesis. Finally, the work herein demonstrates how a housekeeping network of cytoskeletal regulators can be reshaped by a single micro-RNA denominator in a cell type specific manner.