Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • apoptosis (1)
  • axon (1)
  • brain (1)
  • cells (3)
  • cellular (1)
  • central nervous system (1)
  • factor (3)
  • gene (2)
  • glycoproteins (2)
  • Gpm6a (1)
  • HDAC5 (11)
  • HDACs (5)
  • humans (1)
  • M6a (4)
  • MEF2 (2)
  • MEF2C (6)
  • mice (2)
  • microrna (5)
  • miR 124 (4)
  • miR 9 (4)
  • MIRN9 (1)
  • neural stem cells (1)
  • neurogenesis (1)
  • neurons (2)
  • regulates (2)
  • signal (1)
  • stem cells (1)
  • target gene (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    The class IIa histone deacetylases (HDACs) play important roles in the central nervous system during diverse biological processes such as synaptic plasticity, axon regeneration, cell apoptosis, and neural differentiation. Although it is known that HDAC5 regulates neuronal differentiation, neither the physiological function nor the regulation of HDAC5 in neuronal differentiation is clear. Here, we identify HDAC5 as an inhibitor of neurite elongation and show that HDAC5 is regulated by the brain enriched microRNA miR-124 and miR-9. We discover that HDAC5 inhibits neurite extension both in differentiated P19 cells and primary neurons. We also show that the neuronal membrane glycoprotein GPM6A (M6a) is a direct target gene of HDAC5 regulated transcriptional factor MEF2C. HDAC5 inhibits neurite elongation, acting at least partially via a MEF2C/M6a signaling pathway. We also confirmed the miR-124/miR-9 regulated HDAC5-MEF2C-M6a pathway regulates neurite development in primary neurons. Thus, HDAC5 emerges as a cellular conductor of MEF2C and M6a activity and is regulated by miR-124 and miR-9 to control neurite development. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

    Citation

    Xi Gu, Congcong Fu, Lifang Lin, Shuhu Liu, Xiaohong Su, Aili Li, Qiaoqi Wu, Chunhong Jia, Peidong Zhang, Lu Chen, Xinhong Zhu, Xuemin Wang. miR-124 and miR-9 mediated downregulation of HDAC5 promotes neurite development through activating MEF2C-GPM6A pathway. Journal of cellular physiology. 2018 Jan;233(1):673-687

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 28332716

    View Full Text