Target identification is highly instructive in defining the biological roles of microRNAs. However, little is known about other small noncoding RNAs; for example, tRNA-derived RNA Fragments (tRFs). Some tRFs exhibit a gene-silencing mechanism distinctly different from that of typical microRNAs. We recently demonstrated that a respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-induced tRF, called tRF5-GluCTC, promotes RSV replication. RSV is the single most important cause of lower respiratory tract infection in children. By using biochemical screening and bioinformatics analyses, we have identified apolipoprotein E receptor 2 (APOER2) as a target of tRF5-GluCTC. The 3'-portion of tRF5-GluCTC recognizes a target site in the 3'-untranslated region of APOER2 and suppresses its expression. We have also discovered that APOER2 is an anti-RSV protein whose suppression by tRF5-GluCTC promotes RSV replication. Our report represents the first identification of a natural target of a tRF and illustrates how a virus utilizes a host tRF to control a host gene to favor its replication.
Background
In male pre‐pubertal cancer patients, radiation and chemotherapy impact future fertility by eradication of spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs). In macaques, spermatogenesis could be regenerated by intratesticular transplantation of SSCs, but only a small percentage of spermatozoa produced were of donor origin. Transient hormone suppression with a GnRH antagonist (GnRH‐ant) enhanced spermatogenic recovery from transplanted SSCs.
Objectives
To evaluate donor‐derived and endogenous spermatogenic recovery after SSC transplantation into irradiated monkeys and to test whether hormone suppression around the time of transplantation facilitates spermatogenic recovery.
Materials and methods
Testes of 15 adult rhesus monkeys were irradiated with 7 Gy and 4 months later transplanted, to one of the testes, with cryopreserved testicular cells containing SSCs from unrelated monkeys. Monkeys were either treated with GnRH‐ant for 8 weeks before transplantation, GnRH‐ant from 4 weeks before to 4 weeks after transplantation, or with no GnRH‐ant. Tissues were harvested 10 months after transplantation.
Results
Two of the 15 monkeys, a control and a pre‐transplantation GnRH‐ant–treated, showed substantially higher levels of testicular spermatogenesis and epididymal sperm output in the transplanted side as compared to the untransplanted. Over 84% of epididymal spermatozoa on the transplanted side had the donor genotype and were capable of fertilizing eggs after intracytoplasmic sperm injection forming morulae of the donor paternal origin. Low levels of donor spermatozoa (~1%) were also identified in the epididymis of three additional monkeys. Transplantation also appeared to enhance endogenous spermatogenesis.
Discussion and conclusion
We confirmed that SSC transplantation can be used for restoration of fertility in male cancer survivors exposed to irradiation as a therapeutic agent. The success rate of this procedure, however, is low. The success of filling the tubules with the cell suspension, but not the GnRH‐ant treatment, was related to the level of colonization by transplanted cells.
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