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Physiology, Endocrinology & Reproduction

miR-199-3p suppresses cellular migration and viability and promotes progesterone production in goose ovarian follicles before selection through regulating ITGB8 and other ECM-related genes

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 275-282 | Received 07 Sep 2022, Accepted 07 Nov 2022, Published online: 15 Feb 2023
 

ABSTRACT

1. The extracellular matrix (ECM) constitutes the basal lamina and the area between follicular cells. Remodelling the ECM is believed to be a key event in follicular development, especially during selection, and plays an important role in cell migration, survival, and steroidogenesis. miR-199-3p is differentially expressed in the goose granulosa layer during follicular selection and is reported to play a primary role in inhibiting cell migration and invasion. Nevertheless, the effect of miR-199-3p on ovarian follicles and its role in follicular cellular migration is not understood.

2. In this study, qRT-PCR assays revealed that miR-199-3p was differentially expressed in the granulosa layer from goose ovarian follicles before and after follicular selection. Additionally, miR-199-3p overexpression in cultured granulosa cells (GCs) from goose pre-hierarchical follicles significantly suppressed cell viability and migration. It elevated the concentration of progesterone and the expression of key progesterone production genes. Furthermore, miR-199-3p overexpression in the GCs of goose pre-hierarchical follicles inhibited the expression of ECM-related genes (ITGB8, MMP9 and MMP15) yet promoted the expression of another two ECM-related genes (COL4A1 and LAMA1). Finally, dual-fluorescence reporter experiments on 293T cells established the direct targeting of ECM gene ITGB8 by miR-199-3p.

3. In conclusion, miR-199-3p may participate in granulosa cell migration, viability, and steroidogenesis in goose ovarian follicles before selection by modulating ITGB8 and other ECM-related genes.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Supplemental material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1080/00071668.2022.2159788.

Additional information

Funding

This research was funded by Chongqing Scientific Research Institution Performance Incentive Project (No.19535), Chongqing Natural Science Funds of China (No.cstc2020jcyj-msxmX0640), Chongqing Scientific Research Institution Performance Incentive Project (No.cstc2020jxjlX0005), Chongqing Talents Program (No.CQYC20200309103), Study of Important Economic Traits of Geese and Breeding of Synthetic Line Geese (No. cstc2021ycjh-bgzxm0248) and supported by the China Agriculture Research System of MOF and MARA.

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