| Literature DB >> 25963922 |
Wen Pan1, Shu Zhu2, Dai Dai3, Zheng Liu4, Dan Li5, Bin Li5, Nicola Gagliani2, Yunjiang Zheng2, Yuanjia Tang3, Matthew T Weirauch6, Xiaoting Chen7, Wei Zhu4, Yue Wang4, Bo Chen4, Youcun Qian8, Yingxuan Chen9, Jingyuan Fang9, Ronald Herbst4, Laura Richman4, Bahija Jallal4, John B Harley10, Richard A Flavell2, Yihong Yao4, Nan Shen11.
Abstract
Although different autoimmune diseases show discrete clinical features, there are common molecular pathways intimately involved. Here we show that miR-125a is downregulated in peripheral CD4(+) T cells of human autoimmune diseases including systemic lupus erythematosus and Crohn's disease, and relevant autoimmune mouse models. miR-125a stabilizes both the commitment and immunoregulatory capacity of Treg cells. In miR-125a-deficient mice, the balance appears to shift from immune suppression to inflammation, and results in more severe pathogenesis of colitis and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). The genome-wide target analysis reveals that miR-125a suppresses several effector T-cell factors including Stat3, Ifng and Il13. Using a chemically synthesized miR-125a analogue, we show potential to re-programme the immune homeostasis in EAE models. These findings point to miR-125a as a critical factor that controls autoimmune diseases by stabilizing Treg-mediated immune homeostasis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25963922 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 17.694