| Literature DB >> 24528626 |
Shruti Rawal, Patrick Manning, Rajesh Katare1.
Abstract
Diabetic heart disease (DHD) is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among the people with diabetes, with approximately 80% of the deaths in diabetics are due to cardiovascular complications. Importantly, heart disease in the diabetics develop at a much earlier stage, although remaining asymptomatic till the later stage of the disease, thereby restricting its early detection and active therapeutic management. Thus, a better understanding of the modulators involved in the pathophysiology of DHD is necessary for the early diagnosis and development of novel therapeutic implications for diabetes-associated cardiovascular complications. microRNAs (miRs) have recently been evolved as key players in the various cardiovascular events through the regulation of cardiac gene expression. Besides their credible involvement in controlling the cellular processes, they are also released in to the circulation in disease states where they serve as potential diagnostic biomarkers for cardiovascular disease. However, their potential role in DHD as modulators as well as diagnostic biomarkers is largely unexplored. In this review, we describe the putative mechanisms of the selected cardiovascular miRs in relation to cardiovascular diseases and discuss their possible involvement in the pathophysiology and early diagnosis of DHD.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24528626 PMCID: PMC3976030 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2840-13-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Diabetol ISSN: 1475-2840 Impact factor: 9.951
Figure 1miR biogenesis and mRNA silencing mechanisms.
Pathophysiological role of cardiovascular miRs in heart diseases
| 1. | miR-1 | Cardiac and skeletal muscle | SRF (specifically in heart); MEF2 and MyoD (specifically in skeletal muscles) | Cardiac & skeletal muscle proliferation & differentiation; pro-apoptotic in infarcted heart; arrhythmogenesis; inhibition of cardiac hypertrophy | Cardiac hypertrophy, apoptosis, heart failure, arrhythmia | Reported in diabetic cardiomyopathy; may also regulate diabetes-associated arrhythmia and cardiac regeneration. | Downregulation of Pim-1, calmodulin and MEF2a; Hand2, RasGAP, Cdk9, Rheb, fibronectin, HSP60 and HSP70; HDAC4, IGF-1; Cx43 protein; Kir2.1; Junctin, KCNJ2, GJA1, Irx5 | TAC, transgenic mice with AKt overexpression and exercise-induced hypertrophy model in rats; neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes, hypertrophic human atria and ventricles, STZ-diabetic mice, HG-exposed rat cardiomyocytes | [ |
| 2. | miR-133 | Cardiac and skeletal muscle | SRF; MEF2; MyoD; | Promotes cardiogenesis; cardiac regeneration by promoting proliferation; prevents differentiation; decreases heart rate; inhibition of cardiac hypertrophy; inhibition of fibrosis in left ventricle | Cardiac hypertrophy, heart failure, arrhythmia | Reported in diabetic cardiac hypertrophy; diabetes-associated arrhythmia. May be implicated in cardiac regeneration in diabetic heart. | Downregulation of RhoA; Cdc42; Nelf-A/WHSC2; PP2A, ERG, caspase 9, SRF, KCNQ1, nPTB; CyclinD; Sp-1; CTGF | TAC, transgenic mice with AKt overexpression and exercise-induced hypertrophy model in rats; neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes, hypertrophic human atria and ventricles; STZ-type I diabetic mice model; HG-exposed rat cardiomyocytes | [ |
| 3. | miR-126 | Endothelial cells | ETS1 and ETS2 | Promotes angiogenesis, anti-apoptotic | Atherosclerosis, CAD, heart failure, Myocardial infarction | May be involved in Diabetes-mediated atherosclerosis and post-MI remodeling | Upregulation of angiopoietin receptor Tie-1, c-kit, interleukin-8; CXCL12. VEGF, VEGF receptors via repression of Spred-1, Downregulation of EGFL7 | k/o mice; Apoe−/− mice model of atherosclerosis | [ |
| 4. | miR-208a | Cardiac muscle | αMHC | Regulation of cardiac conduction system by controlling atrial depolarization; regulates gene network in stem cell differentiation of cardiomyocytes, upregulation of βMHC | Cardiac hypertrophy, cardiac remodeling, arrhythmia; human dilated cardiomyopathy; fibrosis | May be implicated in diabetic cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, arrhythmia and in cardiac regeneration. | Downregulation of THRAP1, myostatin, βMHC | miR-208a mutant mice, k/o mice, transgenic mice with miR-208a overexpression, TAB-induced hypertrophy in mice | [ |
| 5. | miR-499 | Cardiac ventricles | MRFs and Eos | Cardiac regeneration by regulation of cardiac differentiation and proliferation; cardiac gene reprogramming; anti- apoptotic; regulates stress response genes | myocardial infarction; cardiac hypertrophy; fibrosis and cardiac conduction | Diabetic cardiomyopathy. May be implicated in cardiac regeneration in diabetic heart. | Repression of histone deacetylase 4 and Sox6 proteins; Downregulation of KCNN3 gene encoding SK3 channels; Gadd45alpha; calcineurin; cyclin D1; Bmp2k, Cpne3, Hipk1, Hipk2, Map3k2 (Mekk2), Stk35, Taok1, and Uhmk1 | Transgenic mice with miR-499 overexpression, TAB-induced hypertrophy, human heart, HL-1 cells transfected with miR-499 mimic, neonatal rat cardiomyocytes exposed to anoxia | [ |
| 6. | miR-132 | endothelial cells, Neuron cells | CREB, VEGF | Promotes angiogenesis, regulates cardiac hypertrophy and autophagy, modulates inflammation | myocardial infarction; cardiac hypertrophy; Heart Failure; atherosclerosis and CAD | May be implicated in post-MI, heart failure and cardiac regeneration in diabetic heart. | Downregulation of p120RasGap | HUVECs, Human embryonic stem cell vasculogenesis model | [ |
Figure 2Pathological roles of cardiovascular miRs in heart diseases.
Figure 3Proposed mechanism of modulated expression and release of cardiovascular miRs under pathophysiological conditions.
Overview of clinical studies showing differentially expressed circulating miRs in diabetic patients
| 1 | T2DM | 822 individuals from Bruneck study | Plasma | Downregulation of miR-20b, -21, -24, -15a, -126, -191, -197, -223, -320, -486; Upregulation of miR-28-3p | MiR microarray profiling; qPCR | First study to identify differential miR signature in T2DM patients. | [ |
| Plasma levels of some miRs changed before the manifestation of diabetes, suggesting miRs as early predictive tool in diabetes and vascular disease | |||||||
| 2 | T2DM | 56 subjects: 18 cases of newly diagnosed T2DM patients (n-T2DM); 19 cases of pre-diabetics and 19 cases of T2DM-susceptible individuals with normal glucose tolerance (s-NGT) | Serum | Upregulation of miR-9, -29a, -30d, -34a, -124a, -146a and −375 in n-T2DM. | qPCR | Significant change in expression of diabetes-related miRs in n-T2DM whiles no dramatic change in pre-diabetics and s-NGT. | [ |
| miR-34a most significantly changed in all the 3 study groups. | |||||||
| 3 | T2DM and obese | 13 patients with T2DM; 16 obese patients (OB) with T2DM; 20 obese patients (OB-T2DM) and 20 healthy volunteers. | Serum | miR-15b, -138, -376a and −503 | Pre-screening with pre-aliquoted miR PCR panels and validation of selected miRs by qPCR | First study to identify differential miR signature in T2DM patients, OB, OB-T2DM and healthy subjects. | [ |
| Biomarker potential of miR-15b, miR-138 and miR-376a to differentiate OB from OB-T2DM and T2DM. | |||||||
| Biomarker potential of miR-138 and miR-503 to differentiate T2DM from OB-T2DM. | |||||||
| 4 | T2DM, Individuals with or without metabolic syndrome | 265 individuals: n = 50 with metabolic syndrome; n = 50 with T2DM; n = 89 with hypercholesterolemia; n = 30 with hypertension and n = 46 healthy controls | Blood | miR-23a, -27a, -103, --132, -150, -192, -195, -197, -320a, -375, and −509-5p | MiR microarray profiling; qPCR of selected miRs | Correlation between aberrant miR expression and risk factors in diabetes and its vascular complications. | [ |
| 5 | T2DM with or without vascular complications | 36 individuals: 12 T2DM patients without any chronic complications; 12 T2DM patients with macrovascular and 12 T2DM patients with microvascular complications. | Serum | 52 miRs in T2DM with macrovascular and 68 miRs in T2DM with microvascular complications | MiR microarray profiling; qPCR of selected miRs | Upregulation of miR-31a in T2Dm with microvascular complications | [ |
| 6 | T1DM | Hvidoere (275 T1DM patients), Danish (129 T1DM patients) and Copenhagen Puberty (151 T1DM patients) Cohorts | Serum | Upregulation of miR-24, -25, 26a, -27a/b, -29a, -30a-5p, -148a, -152, -181, -200a and −210 | MiR microarray profiling; qPCR | miR-25 negatively associated with beta-cell function and positively associated with glycaemic control | [ |
Figure 4Supporting the hypothesis that miRs could be a potential diagnostic biomarker for early diagnosis of diabetic heart disease. Heart disease in diabetes develops at a much earlier stage before it is clinically diagnosed and if undiagnosed and untreated, it may lead to HF at later stage. Diabetes is associated with marked molecular changes in the heart produced by miRs. These molecular changes occur before any structural and functional alteration in diabetic heart. Altered expression of miRs in diabetic heart inhibits the synthesis of essential proteins required for the normal cardiac physiology. Parallel to this, these cardiovascular miRs are also released into the bloodstream, where they can be easily detected as biomarkers for DHD.