| Literature DB >> 26495316 |
Melisa Lopez-Anton1, Timothy Bowen1, Robert H Jenkins1.
Abstract
Preservation of peritoneal cavity homeostasis and peritoneal membrane function is critical for long-term peritoneal dialysis (PD) treatment. Several microRNAs (miRNAs) have been implicated in the regulation of key molecular pathways driving peritoneal membrane alterations leading to PD failure. miRNAs regulate the expression of the majority of protein coding genes in the human genome, thereby affecting most biochemical pathways implicated in cellular homeostasis. In this review, we report published findings on miRNAs and PD therapy, with emphasis on evidence for changes in peritoneal miRNA expression during long-term PD treatment. Recent work indicates that PD effluent- (PDE-) derived cells change their miRNA expression throughout the course of PD therapy, contributing to the loss of peritoneal cavity homeostasis and peritoneal membrane function. Changes in miRNA expression profiles will alter regulation of key molecular pathways, with the potential to cause profound effects on peritoneal cavity homeostasis during PD treatment. However, research to date has mainly adopted a literature-based miRNA-candidate methodology drawing conclusions from modest numbers of patient-derived samples. Therefore, the study of miRNA expression during PD therapy remains a promising field of research to understand the mechanisms involved in basic peritoneal cell homeostasis and PD failure.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26495316 PMCID: PMC4606405 DOI: 10.1155/2015/929806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1miRNA dysregulation in peritoneal dialysis. (a) miRNA biogenesis pathway. miRNAs are transcribed by RNA polymerase (Pol II) or Pol III as primary miRNA (pri-miRNA) transcripts that are processed by Drosha to generate precursor miRNAs (pre-miRNAs). Pre-miRNA hairpins are transported by Exportin-5 to the cytoplasm, where mature miRNAs are generated by Dicer, and incorporated into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). miRNA-RISC complexes bind to the 3′ untranslated regions (3′ UTRs) of target mRNAs by partial complementarity, resulting in repression of translation and/or mRNA degradation. (b) Peritoneal mesothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (MMT) is associated with PD therapy. Healthy peritoneal mesothelial cells (PMCs; left hand side) undergo morphological changes during PD-driven MMT, invading the submesothelium where they contribute to angiogenesis and fibrosis and increase extracellular matrix (ECM) components deposition during PD therapy (right hand side). (c) Dysregulated miRNA expression resulting from PD therapy. Only miRNAs for which specific evidence in HPMCs exists are shown.
miRNAs implicated in the regulation of peritoneal cavity homeostasis during peritoneal dialysis therapy.
| miRNA | Study selection | Model(s) | Target(s) | Downstream signaling | References |
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| Microarray analysis (rat PD model, 4 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | Rat PD model (4 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | No | No | [ |
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| Microarray analysis (rat PD model, 4 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | Rat PD model (4 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | Snail1& | miR-30a acts as a negative regulator of TGF- | [ |
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| Microarray analysis (rat PD model, MGO-induced EMT, 1-2 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | Rat MGO-induced EMT PD model (1-2 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | BMP7 | BMP-7 is downregulated in rat MGO-induced EMT PD model, reverted by miR-30b-ASO, and directly targeted by miR-30b, which could antagonize TGF- | [ |
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| Microarray analysis (mouse PD model, 4 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | Mouse PD model (4 weeks, total peritoneal tissue) | No | No | [ |
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| Microarray analysis (PDE-derived HPMCs from PD patients) | PDE-derived HPMCs from PD patients | SIP1, SOX4 | miR-129-5p modulates E-cadherin and vimentin expression by targeting SIP1 and SOX4 genes or by modulating the promoter activity of E-cadherin and vimentin by the TGF- | [ |
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| Unpublished (preexperiment CAPD profile miRNAs) | PDE-derived HPMCs from PD patients | No | No | [ |
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| Literature-based: studies on TGF- | Mouse PD model with miR-29b overexpression (total omentum and peritoneal tissue) | SP1& | Blockade of the Sp1/TGF- | [ |
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| Literature-based | PDE-derived HPMCs from PD patients | No | No | [ |
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| Literature-based: studies on potential EMT miRNAs | PDE-derived cells from PD patients | No | No | [ |
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| Literature-based: studies related to kidney development and diseases | Cultured HPMCs stimulated by D-glucose (time course, 48 h) as a EMT model | No | No | [ |
miRNA sequence is not conserved between the model of study and human.
#miRNA sequence is not present in miRBase (v21, June 2014) for rat or human.
&Putative targets already described [19, 20].