Competing endogenous RNA crosstalk at system level
Mattia Miotto, Enzo Marinari, Andrea De Martino

TL;DR
This study investigates the large-scale systemic features of miRNA-mediated ceRNA crosstalk, revealing its weak but resilient and widespread influence on gene regulation, stability, and network connectivity.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale in silico analysis showing how systemic crosstalk emerges from network topology despite individual interactions being weak.
Findings
System-level crosstalk is enhanced by transcriptional heterogeneity.
Crosstalk can be strong even among non-co-regulated RNAs.
RNA levels are more stable when crosstalk is strong.
Abstract
microRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression at post-transcriptional level by repressing target RNA molecules. Competition to bind miRNAs tends in turn to correlate their targets, establishing effective RNA-RNA interactions that can influence expression levels, buffer fluctuations and promote signal propagation. Such a potential has been characterized mathematically for small motifs both at steady state and \red{away from stationarity}. Experimental evidence, on the other hand, suggests that competing endogenous RNA (ceRNA) crosstalk is rather weak. Extended miRNA-RNA networks could however favour the integration of many crosstalk interactions, leading to significant large-scale effects in spite of the weakness of individual links. To clarify the extent to which crosstalk is sustained by the miRNA interactome, we have studied its emergent systemic features in silico in large-scale…
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