ARF sees Pdgfrβ through the miR.
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Cell Cycle 13:10, 1520–1521; May 15, 2014; © 2014 Landes Bioscience
ARF sees Pdgfrβ through the miR
Comment on: Iqbal N, et al. Cell Cycle 2014; 13:792–800;
PMID:24401748; http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cc.27725
Sara M Reed1,2, Frederick W Quelle1,3, and Dawn E Quelle1,2,3,4,*; 1Department of Pharmacology; The University of Iowa; Carver College of Medicine;
Iowa City, IA USA; 2Medical Scientist Training Program; The University of Iowa; Carver College of Medicine; Iowa City, IA USA; 3Holden Comprehensive
Cancer Center; The University of Iowa; Carver College of Medicine; Iowa City, IA USA; 4Department of Pathology; The University of Iowa; Carver College
of Medicine; Iowa City, IA USA; *Email: ; http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cc.28900
ARF, the alternative reading frame protein
encoded by the Ink4a–ARF (Cdkn2a) locus, is
best known for suppressing cancer through
p53-dependent and p53-independent pathways.1 Although less widely appreciated, ARF
is also important in development. Loss of ARF
causes blindness in mice, mimicking persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous (PHPV)
eye disease in humans.2 Blindness in ARF-null
animals results from increased expression
of platelet-derived growth factor receptor β
(Pdgfrβ) in perivascular cells within the vitreous of the eye, which stimulates their inappropriate proliferation and prevents the
vascular regression needed for sight. Pdgfrβ
loss rescues the ARF−/− eye phenotype and
restores vision, establishing the physiological
significance of the ARF–Pdgfrβ pathway. 3,4 For
years, ARF was thought to inhibit Pdgfrβ independently of p53, but new evidence reveals
it occurs through combined p53-dependent and p53-independent mechanisms.4,5
Specifically, ARF blocks Pdgfrβ mRNA expression by p53-mediated repression and can
inhibit Pdgfrβ translation independently of
p53 via induction of miR-34a (Fig. 1).
microRNAs (miRNAs) control gene expression through post-transcriptional mechanisms, leading Iqbal et al. to hypothesize that
miRNAs could mediate the p53-independent
suppression of Pdgfrβ translation by ARF.5
Consequently, they compiled a list of miRNAs
expressed in the developing eye that might
target the 3′ untranslated region (UTR) of
Pdgfrβ, and of those found that miR-34a was
the most highly induced by ARF in p53-null
cells. This is the first reported p53-independent connection between ARF and miR34a.
The authors then showed that miR-34a directly
targets the 3′ UTR and represses translation of
Pdgfrβ mRNA, and that miR34a is required for
ARF’s ability to inhibit Pdgf-B ligand-induced
cell proliferation in MEFs lacking p53. That this
mechanism may function in vivo is suggested
1520
by reduced levels of miR-34a in the vitreous
of ARF-null embryos. Together, these findings
establish miR-34a as an essential p53-independent mediator of ARF–Pdgfrβ regulation,
suggesting a critical role for miR34a in vascular remodeling during eye development.
While provocative, that prediction remains to
be tested in vivo.
Work by the Skapek group has also clarified the involvement of p53 in ARF–Pdgfrβ
regulation and eye development. Early studies
showed ARF is required for eyesight regardless of p53 status, and most p53-null mice
have normal eyes, indicating little if any role
for p53.2 However, p53 must play some role,
because p53−/− mice on pure C57BL/6 or BALB/c
backgrounds can develop primary vitreous
hyperplasia and vision defects. The discovery
that ARF represses Pdgfrβ transcription via
p534 and blocks Pdgfrβ protein synthesis via
miR-34a5 helps resolve this puzzle by showing
that ARF regulates Pdgfrβ through complementary p53-dependent and p53-independent mechanisms (Fig. 1). Intriguingly, while
ARF can induce miR-34a independently of
p53, miR-34a is a well-recognized p53 transcriptional target, and both ARF and p53 are
required for maximal miR-34a levels.5 These
findings led Iqbal et al. to conclude that ARF
may promote sufficient expression of miR34a to compensate for p53 loss and prevent
eye defects on most genetic backgrounds, an
effect that would be enhanced by the upregulation of ARF resulting from p53 deficiency.1,4
However, it remains unclear why the ARFmiR‑34a-Pdgfrβ pathway cannot compensate
for p53 loss in some inbred strains. Is the pathway defective in those animals, or are there
other regulators still to be identified?
Interestingly, ARF controls the expression
of other miRNAs besides miR-34a in the eye
and in p53-null cells, including the miR-34a
relatives miR-34b/c.5 What is the contribution of those miRNAs to p53-independent
ARF activities? Also, how does ARF regulate
miR-34a and the other miRNAs identified in
this study? Repression of Drosha, the catalytic
core of miRNA-processing complexes, seems
most likely, since ARF was recently found to
block its translation and thereby influence
the expression of numerous miRNAs.6 Finally,
ARF, miR-34a, and Pdgfr signaling each have
demonstrated or predicted roles in other
important biological processes besides development, including cancer, aging, and diabetes
(Fig. 1). This prompts many new questions. For
Figure 1. ARF employs complementary mechanisms to suppress Pdgfrb expression and inhibit
cell proliferation. ARF inhibits Pdgfrb mRNA expression via p53-mediated repression and blocks
Pdgfrb protein synthesis by upregulating miR-34a (and possibly other miRNAs). The novel ARFmiR-34a link to Pdgfrb (highlighted in red) may contribute to other significant biological processes
in addition to development, including cancer, aging, and diabetes.
Cell Cycle
Volume 13 Issue 10
example, is miR-34a critical for ARF-mediated
tumor suppression in the absence of p53?
Does Pdgfr signaling, which upregulates Ezh2
(a repressor of INK4a-ARF), form an autoregulatory feedback loop with ARF-miR-34a that
controls pancreatic β-cell proliferation and
diabetes?7,8 If so, it would expose a currently
undefined role for ARF (unlike the established
contribution of p16INK4a) in that disease. Clearly,
the implications of the Iqbal et al. study connecting ARF-miR-34a to Pdgfrβ repression
extend beyond eye development and may
www.landesbioscience.com
represent a unique mechanism through which
ARF influences other human conditions independent of p53.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/
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