| Literature DB >> 24385846 |
Isabel Gigli1, Daniel Omar Maizon2.
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been identified in cells as well as in exosomes in biological fluids such as milk. In mammary gland, most of the miRNAs studied have functions related to immunity and show alterations in their pattern of expression during lactation. In mastitis, the inflammatory response caused by Streptococcus uberis alters the expression of miRNAs that may regulate the innate immune system. These small RNAs are stable at room temperature and are resistant to repeated freeze/thaw cycles, acidic conditions and degradation by RNAse, making them resistant to industrial procedures. These properties mean that miRNAs could have multiple applications in veterinary medicine and biotechnology. Indeed, lactoglobulin-free milk has been produced in transgenic cows expressing specific miRNAs. Although plant and animal miRNAs have undergone independent evolutionary adaptation recent studies have demonstrated a cross-kingdom passage in which rice miRNA was isolated from human serum. This finding raises questions about the possible effect that miRNAs present in foods consumed by humans could have on human gene regulation. Further studies are needed before applying miRNA biotechnology to the milk industry. New discoveries and a greater knowledge of gene expression will lead to a better understanding of the role of miRNAs in physiology, nutrition and evolution.Entities:
Keywords: lactation; mastitis; miRNA; milk
Year: 2013 PMID: 24385846 PMCID: PMC3873174 DOI: 10.1590/S1415-47572013005000040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Mol Biol ISSN: 1415-4757 Impact factor: 1.771
Figure 1A schematic representation of the canonical biogenesis of miRNA. Initially, a long hairpin-shaped (pri-miRNA) is transcribed by RNA polymerase II and then cleaved by Drosha (to yield pre-miRNA) prior to leaving the nucleus; the molecule is subsequently cleaved by a Dicer enzyme to yield double-stranded mature miRNA. Finally, miRNA is incorporated into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), thereby allowing separation of the functional strand that interferes with mRNA by repressing translation or cleaving mRNA.
Total number of miRNAs reported in colostrum, milk and mammary gland in cow, goat and sheep.
| Number of miRNAs
| Methods | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Species | Colostrum | Milk | Mammary gland | ||
| Cow | 230 | 213 | Solexa deep sequencing analysis | ||
| Cow | 921 | Solexa deep sequencing analysis | |||
| Goat | 100 | 53 | Microarray-real time PCR | ||
| Goat | 328 | Solexa deep sequencing analysis | |||
| Goat | 180 | 441 | Solexa deep sequencing analysis | ||
| Sheep | 101 | cDNA sequencing | |||
Figure 2Diagram of the mammary epithelial cell response to infection by Streptococcus uberis in vivo and in vitro. (A) Mammary alveolus showing (a) epithelial cells, (b) myoepithelial cells, (c) basement membrane, (d) extracellular matrix and (e) capillary. In the alveolar lumen: (f) bacterial infiltration and (g) neutrophil infiltration. The accompanying box shows that 12 h after inoculation with S. uberis there was a decrease in the expression of miRNAs 15b, 16a, 31, 145 and 181a and an increase in miRNA 223 to modulate the inflammatory response (Naeem ). (B) Mammary epithelial cells inoculated with S. uberis. No changes were observed at 1 h but there was an increase in miRNAs 29e and 708 at 2 h, an increase in miRNAs 7b and 98 and a decrease in miRNAs 29b-2, 193 and 130a at 4 h and, finally, an increase in 12 miRNAs (7b, 7d, 7e, 200c, 210, 24-2, 128-2, 128-1, 185, 652, 494 and 2342) concomitantly with a decrease in miRNA 29b2, 29e, 29c, 100 and 130a at 6 h (Lawless ).
Summary of miRNA expression in mammary gland, mammary epithelial cell lines and milk in cow and sheep.
| miRNA | Tissue or biological fluid | Species | Expression level | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miRNA 7b | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 7d | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 7e | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 10a | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 15a | MECL | Cow | Elevated in transfected cells | |
| miRNA 15b | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation and reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 16 | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 16a | MGT | Cow | Reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 21 | MGT | Cow/sheep | Elevated in cow during lactation and in sheep during early pregnancy | |
| miRNA 24-2 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 29-b2 | Milk | Cow | Reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 29c | Milk | Cow | Reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 29e | Milk | Cow | Elevated and then reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 31 | MGT/milk | Cow | Reduced in lactation and mastitis | |
| miRNA 33b | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 98 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 100 | Milk | Cow | Reduced in lactation | |
| miRNA 128-1 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 128-2 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 130a | MGT | Cow | Reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA145 | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation and reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 146b | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 148a | Milk | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 155 | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 181a | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation and reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 185 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 193a | MGT | Cow | Reduced in mastitis | |
| miRNA 200 | MGT | Sheep | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 200c | MGT/milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 205 | MGT | Cow/sheep | Elevated in cow lactation and mastitis and second half of sheep pregnancy | |
| miRNA 210 | MGT/milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 221 | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation | |
| miRNA 223 | MGT | Cow | Elevated in lactation and mastitis | |
| miRNA 494 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 652 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 708 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis | |
| miRNA 2342 | Milk | Cow | Elevated in mastitis |
ECL: mammary epithelial cell line, MGT: mammary gland tissue.
Figure 3Bos taurus lactoglobulin B (LGB) mRNA sequence (GenBank accession number BC108213.1) showing the positions of miRNA6 and miRNA4 that targeted LGB, as designed by Jabed . The numbers refer to the nucleotide positions.