Mir-199 microRNA precursor
The miR-199 microRNA precursor is a short non-coding RNA
gene involved in gene regulation.
miR-199 genes have now been predicted or experimentally confirmed in mouse, human and a further 21 other species. microRNAs are transcribed as ~70 nucleotide precursors and subsequently processed by the Dicer enzyme to give a ~22 nucleotide product. The mature products are thought to have regulatory roles through complementarity to mRNA.
Origin and evolution of miR-199
miR-199 has been shown to be a vertebrate specific miR family that emerge at the origin of the vertebrate lineage. Three paralogs of miR-199 can usually be found in non-teleost vertebrate species and 4 to 5 copies in the teleost species. All miR-199 genes are located on opposite strand of orthologous intron of Dynamin genes. Within Dynamin3 gene, miR-199 is associated with miR-214 and both miRs are transcribed together as a common primary transcript, demonstrated in mouse, human and zebrafish.Targets and expression of miR-199
miR-199 has been shown to be implicated in a wide variety of cellular and developmental mechanisms such as various cancer development and progression, cardiomyocytes protection or skeletal formation.Using microarray and immunoblotting analyses it has been shown that miR-199a* targets the Met proto-oncogene.
MicroRNA hsa-miR-199a is a regulator of IκB kinase-β expression.
Using TaqMan real-time quantitative PCR array methods, miRNA expression has been profiled. miR-199a, one of the most significantly overexpressed in invasive squamous cell carcinomas, was evaluated by transfecting cervical cancer cells with anti-miR-199a oligonucleotides and the cell viability assessed.
mirR-199a*, mir199a and mirR-199b were significantly overexpressed in ISCCs.