Regulation of microRNA-375 by cAMP in pancreatic β-cells.
Mol Endocrinol · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28This study found that a molecule called miR-375, which affects insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, is reduced when another pathway (cAMP-PKA) is activated. This reduction happens quickly in lab-grown cells (within 15 minutes) and more slowly in isolated pancreas tissue (after several hours) when exposed to a GLP-1 drug called exendin-4. The study also confirms that high blood sugar can lower miR-375, but it does so through a different pathway than the one used by exendin-4.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Mol Endocrinol, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 52 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.39 |
| NIH percentile | 62 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
MicroRNA-375 (miR-375) is necessary for proper formation of pancreatic islets in vertebrates and is necessary for the development of β-cells in mice, but regulation of miR-375 in these cells is poorly understood. Here, we show that miR-375 is transcriptionally repressed by the cAMP-protein kinase A (PKA) pathway and that this repression is mediated through a block in RNA polymerase II binding to the miR-375 promoter. cAMP analogs that are PKA selective repress miR-375, as do cAMP agonists and the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, exendin-4. Repression of the miR-375 precursor occurs rapidly in rat insulinoma INS-1 832/13 cells, within 15 min after cAMP stimulation, although the mature microRNA declines more slowly due to the kinetics of RNA processing. Repression of miR-375 in isolated rat islets by exendin-4 also occurs slowly, after several hours of stimulation. Glucose is another reported antagonist of miR-375 expression, although we demonstrate here that glucose does not target the microRNA through the PKA pathway. As reported previously, miR-375 negatively regulates insulin secretion, and attenuation of miR-375 through the cAMP-PKA pathway may boost the insulin response in pancreatic β-cells.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22539037 ↗