Functional long noncoding RNAs in neural development

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $589,156 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been implicated in a wide range of human neurological disorders including cancer, developmental delay, psychiatric and neurodegenerative disease. While it is known that the brain is enriched in specific lncRNAs, relatively few have been characterized in terms of function and molecular mechanism. Our long-term goal is to understand the function and molecular mechanisms of lncRNAs in neurodevelopment. Such fundamental knowledge is critical to understanding how this large aspect of the noncoding genome regulates brain development and disease. We have taken two approaches for the study of lncRNA function. The first approach is a “traditional” molecular-genetic study of a brain-specific, evolutionarily conserved lncRNA that is a potent regulator of neural stem cells (NSCs). In previous studies, we identified a novel lncRNA transcript that we named Pnky (Pou3f2 intergenic non-koding). In cultured NSCs, either Pnky transcript knockdown or Pnky conditional knockout (Pnky-cKO) increases neuronal production by ~4-fold. Pnky is required for proper cortical neurogenesis in vivo, and the expression of Pnky from a BAC transgene (BAC-Pnky) fully rescues Pnky-deletion – including at the level of the transcriptome – indicating that this lncRNA functions in trans. Pnky interacts with the splicing regulator PTBP1 (Polypyrimidine tract binding protein 1) – a critical regulator of neurogenesis from NSCs – and Pnky appears to function in the same molecular pathway as PTBP1. Preliminary Studies demonstrate that Pnky folds into a compact, monodisperse state that contains intricate structures including a pseudoknot, which is a structural module known to have important function in noncoding RNAs. Given these data, we hypothesize that Pnky contains functional structural modules and regulates the function of PTBP1. Our second approach is to use systematic functional screens to discover key principles of lncRNA genome function. In Preliminary Studies, we used CRISPRi to screen in parallel 10,671 lncRNA and 18,905 mRNA genes for roles in the neural induction of NSCs from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). We also performed CRISPRi perturbation coupled with droplet- based single-cell RNA-Seq (Perturb-Seq) for hundreds of screen hits. Based on results from these systematic studies, our working hypothesis is that functional lncRNAs – in comparison to coding genes – are enriched for roles in “focusing” differentiation to specific neural cell types. To further test this hypothesis, we will study lncRNA function in human brain organoids and extend our screens to analyze neurogenesis. Determining the unique functional roles of lncRNAs and coding genes at genome-scale will have important, broad impact on the interpretation of transcriptomic and epigenomic studies of neurodevelopment. Together, by studying lncRNA function at the level of individual transcripts and also at genome scale, we expect to gain fundamental insights into t...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10880527
Project number
5R01NS124881-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO
Principal Investigator
DANIEL A LIM
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$589,156
Award type
5
Project period
2022-07-01 → 2027-06-30