| Literature DB >> 27304911 |
Liheng Shi1, Andy Jeesu Kim1, Richard Cheng-An Chang2, Janet Ya-An Chang1, Wei Ying2, Michael L Ko1, Beiyan Zhou2,3, Gladys Yi-Ping Ko1,4.
Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the leading cause of blindness among American adults above 40 years old. The vascular complication in DR is a major cause of visual impairment, making finding therapeutic targets to block pathological angiogenesis a primary goal for developing DR treatments. MicroRNAs (miRs) have been proposed as diagnostic biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets for various ocular diseases including DR. In diabetic animals, the expression levels of several miRs, including miR-150, are altered. The expression of miR-150 is significantly suppressed in pathological neovascularization in mice with hyperoxia-induced retinopathy. The purpose of this study was to investigate the functional role of miR-150 in the development of retinal microvasculature complications in high-fat-diet (HFD) induced type 2 diabetic mice. Wild type (WT) and miR-150 null mutant (miR-150-/-) male mice were given a HFD (59% fat calories) or normal chow diet. Chronic HFD caused a decrease of serum miR-150 in WT mice. Mice on HFD for 7 months (both WT and miR-150-/-) had significant decreases in retinal light responses measured by electroretinograms (ERGs). The retinal neovascularization in miR-150-/--HFD mice was significantly higher compared to their age matched WT-HFD mice, which indicates that miR-150 null mutation exacerbates chronic HFD-induced neovascularization in the retina. Overexpression of miR-150 in cultured endothelial cells caused a significant reduction of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2) protein levels. Hence, deletion of miR-150 significantly increased the retinal pathological angiogenesis in HFD induced type 2 diabetic mice, which was in part through VEGFR2.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27304911 PMCID: PMC4909316 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0157543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Systemic status of WT and miR-150 null mutant (miR-150-/-) mice with normal chow diet or HFD.
Wild type (WT) and miR-150-/- mice were fed with a normal chow diet (Normal) or HFD for 27 weeks. (A) The body weights and (B) blood glucose levels measured at the end of 27 weeks are presented. (A and B) There is a statistically significant difference between the HFD and Normal groups, but there is no statistical difference between WT-HFD and miR-150-/--HFD. There is no statistical interaction between miR-150 null mutation and HFD regimen (2-way ANOVA). n = 5 for each group. (C) Wild type mice fed with HFD have a significant decrease of miR-150 expression compared to mice fed with normal diet (Normal; student’s t-test). *p < 0.05. miR-39 was used as the internal spike-control. The relative abundance of miR-150 / miR-39 for Normal is 0.02819 ± 0.00199, and for HFD is 0.02032 ± 0.00194. n = 5 for each group.
Fig 2Scotopic and photopic light responses are decreased in WT and miR-150-/- mice fed with HFD.
All mice were dark adapted for at least 6 hours before ERG recordings. (A) The average scotopic ERG a-wave amplitudes recorded from miR-150-/- with HFD (miR-150-/--HFD) are significantly lower compared to the WT fed with normal chow diet (WT-Normal; *) or miR-150-/- fed with normal chow diet (miR-150-/--Normal; #). There is no statistical difference between WT fed with HFD (WT-HFD) and miR-150-/--HFD. HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/- groups) had significantly smaller (v) a-wave amplitudes compared to mice fed with a normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/- groups). The miR-150-/- mice (both normal chow and HFD groups) had significantly smaller (w) a-wave amplitudes compared to the WT mice (both normal chow and HFD groups). (B) The averaged photopic ERG a-wave amplitudes recorded from WT-HFD are significantly lower than WT-Normal (*) at 3 and 10 cd.s/m2 light intensities. The photopic a-wave amplitudes recorded from miR-150-/--HFD are significantly lower than WT-normal (#) at 3, 10, and 25 cd.s/m2 light intensities. HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/- groups) had significantly smaller (v) amplitudes compared to mice fed with a normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/- groups). (C) The average scotopic ERG b-wave amplitudes recorded from miR-150-/--HFD are significantly lower compared to WT-Normal (*) or miR-150-/--Normal (#). There is no statistical difference between WT-HFD and miR-150-/--HFD. HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/- groups) had significantly smaller (v) a-wave amplitudes compared to mice fed with a normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/- groups). The miR-150-/- mice (both normal chow and HFD groups) had significantly smaller (w) a-wave amplitudes compared to the WT mice (both normal chow and HFD groups). (D) The averaged ERG photopic b-wave amplitudes recorded from WT-HFD are significantly lower than WT-Normal (*) and miR-150-/--Normal (#) at 1 and 10 cd.s/m2 light intensities. The photopic b-wave amplitudes recorded from miR-150-/--HFD are significantly different from the other 3 groups (&) at 25 cd.s/m2 light intensities. HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/- groups) had significantly smaller (v) amplitudes compared to mice fed with a normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/- groups). (E) The averaged scotopic oscillatory potential amplitudes [as a summation from OP1 to OP4; Ʃ(OP1-4)] recorded from HFD-mice (both WT-HFD and miR-150-/--HFD) are significantly lower (*) than mice fed with a normal chow (both WT-Normal and miR-150-/--Normal) at 0.1, 0.3, 10, and 25 cd.s/m2 light intensities. (F) The averaged photopic oscillatory potential amplitudes [Ʃ(OP1-4)] recorded from HFD-mice (both WT-HFD and miR-150-/--HFD) are significantly lower (*) than mice fed with a normal chow (both WT-Normal and miR-150-/--Normal) at 25 cd.s/m2 light intensities. (A-F) Overall, there is no statistical significance of interaction between two factors: miR-150 null mutation and HFD regimen (2-way ANOVA). p < 0.05 (denoted as *, #, &, v, w). Data of scotopic and photopic ERG a- and b-waves and OPs are listed in Tables 1 and 2.
Dark-adapted (scotopic) retinal light responses (Data for Fig 2A, 2B and 2E).
| Light Intensity cd·s/m2 | WT-Normal | WT-HFD | miR-150-/--Normal | miR-150-/--HFD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 56.5±7.0 | 42.6±5.6 | 46.6±8.5 | 29.1±4.4 | |
| 100.8±9.7 | 76.1±7.8 | 90.6±14.0 | 64.1±7.0 | |
| 124.2±10.5 | 91.3±6.7 | 103.8±13.0 | 80.2±6.6 | |
| 139.3±11.4 | 105.8±8.3 | 115.5±12.6 | 109.2±20.9 | |
| 197.7±13.6 | 145.9±13.2 | 179.6±18.7 | 126.4±11.4 | |
| 206.2±14.1 | 175.6±13.9 | 187.3±18.5 | 131.2±7.9 | |
| 375.3±22.9 | 339.9±34.1 | 383.9±48.8 | 258.3±22.4 | |
| 456.8±24.0 | 352.3±27.8 | 459.2±50.8 | 327.7±23.4 | |
| 481.7±24.5 | 392.3±31.2 | 482.8±48.5 | 353.6±21.9 | |
| 498.4±26.8 | 404.1±32.7 | 488.4±45.7 | 356.0±18.0 | |
| 582.8±29.4 | 456.0±39.1 | 603.7±55.7 | 415.5±28.2 | |
| 588.7±32.4 | 478.8±38.0 | 611.0±54.3 | 415.7±23.6 | |
| 266.2±12.9 | 193.4±19.7 | 197.6±13.8 | 207.2±17.6 | |
| 316.3±11.8 | 211.0±21.5 | 326.9±16.3 | 248.3±11.4 | |
| 296.9±14.0 | 240.5±19.1 | 297.8±23.0 | 249.8±18.4 | |
| 261.4±20.4 | 218.2±19.0 | 262.34±24.5 | 220.0±16.8 | |
| 368.9±13.9 | 288.3±16.5 | 369.5±14.3 | 301.7±7.1 | |
| 374.7±15.7 | 312.1±14.6 | 364.0±16.24 | 308.9±12.0 | |
Scotopic ERG a-wave:
* denotes miR-150-/—HFD significantly different from WT-Normal.
# denotes miR-150-/—HFD significantly different from miR-150-/—Normal.
There is a significant difference between mice with normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/-) and HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/-), indicating the impact of HFD on the scotopic ERG a-wave.
There is a significant difference between WT (both normal chow and HFD) and miR-150-/-, indicating the impact of miR-150 null mutation on the scotopic ERG a-wave.
Scotopic ERG b-wave:
* denotes miR-150-/--HFD significantly different from WT-Normal.
denotes miR-150-/--HFD significantly different from miR-150-/--Normal.
There is a significant difference between mice with normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/-) and HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/-), indicating the impact of HFD on the scotopic ERG b-wave.
Scotopic ERG Oscillatory Potentials:
^ denotes both WT-HFD and miR-150-/—HFD significantly different from both WT-Normal and miR-150-/—Normal, indicating the impact of HFD on scotopic ERG OPs.
Light-adapted (photopic) retinal light responses (Data for Fig 2C, 2D and 2F).
| Light Intensity cd·s/m2 | WT-Normal | WT-HFD | miR-150-/--Normal | miR-150-/--HFD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.1±0.6 | 4.3±0.6 | 2.9±0.6 | 4.0±0.8 | |
| 6.7±1.1 | 5.6±0.7 | 5.7±0.3 | 4.6±0.4 | |
| 12.4±1.7 | 7.3±0.9 | 8.8±0.8 | 7.4±0.5 | |
| 18.6±2.1 | 11.6±1.1 | 14.0±1.4 | 12.2±0.8 | |
| 26.7±2.9 | 21.6±2.3 | 21.8±1.3 | 14.8±1.2 | |
| 20.4±1.6 | 13.3±2.3 | 13.6±1.7 | 15.9±2.0 | |
| 37.6±3.2 | 21.8±2.9 | 40.2±4.6 | 29.4±2.1 | |
| 63.2±4.6 | 33.8±4.8 | 66.5±6.7 | 46.7±3.4 | |
| 97.8±8.9 | 62.3±8.6 | 101.2±10.5 | 72.9±5.0 | |
| 141.5±12.0 | 84.6±13.0 | 140.0±12.7 | 100.6±5.8 | |
| 6.63±0.69 | 6.03±0.37 | 7.40±0.86 | 5.44±0.87 | |
| 11.3±1.4 | 9.92±0.47 | 11.7±1.2 | 8.81±0.90 | |
| 18.8±1.8 | 15.1±0.9 | 19.4±1.8 | 14.0±1.2 | |
Photopic ERG a-wave:
* denotes WT-HFD significantly different from WT-Normal.
# denotes miR-150-/—HFD significantly different from WT-Normal.
There is a significant difference between mice with normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/-) and HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/-), indicating the impact of HFD on the photopic ERG a-wave.
There is a significant difference between WT (both normal chow and HFD) and miR-150-/-, indicating the impact of miR-150 null mutation on the photopic ERG a-wave.
Photopic ERG b-wave:
* denotes WT-HFD significantly different from WT-Normal.
# denotes WT-HFD significantly different from miR-150-/—Normal.
& denotes miR-150-/—HFD significantly different from all other 3 groups.
There is a significant difference between mice with normal chow (both WT and miR-150-/-) and HFD-mice (both WT and miR-150-/-), indicating the impact of HFD on the photopic ERG b-wave.
Photopic ERG Oscillatory Potentials:
^ denotes both WT-HFD and miR-150-/--HFD significantly different from both WT-Normal and miR-150-/--Normal, indicating the impact of HFD on photopic ERG OPs.
Fig 3Deletion of miR-150 exacerbates HFD-induced DR neovascularization and microaneurysms.
(A) Upper two rows: the whole mount retinal vasculature was stained with FITC-labeled isolectin-B4. The first row: the fluorescent images from 4 experimental groups were taken at 5X (scale bar = 400 μm). The highlighted regions (yellow square) were magnified at 10X and displayed in the second row. The second row: the fluorescent images from 4 experimental groups were taken at 10X (scale bar = 100 μm). Lower two rows: the mouse retinas were trypsin-digested and the retinal vasculatures were stained with hematoxylin and eosin. The third row: the whole retinal vasculature images are shown (scale bar = 400 μm). The fourth row: magnified images of retinal vasculature (from the third row) are shown (scale bar = 100 μm). White arrowheads indicate the pericytes, the red arrowheads indicate the acellular capillaries, and the white circles indicate the microaneurysm-like (vascular extrusion) structures. (B) Wild type and miR-150-/- mice fed with HFD have significantly higher (*) vasculature in central and peripheral retinal areas compared to mice fed with normal chow diet (Normal). There is a statistical significant difference in the interaction between miR-150 null mutation and HFD regimen (2-way ANOVA; #). (C) Wild type and miR-150-/- mice fed with HFD have significantly higher (*) densities of microaneurysm-like structures (microaneurysms per 0.6 mm2 retinal area) compared to mice fed with normal chow diet (Normal). There is a statistical significant difference in the interaction between miR-150 null mutation and HFD regimen (2-way ANOVA; #). WT-Normal: n = 6; WT-HFD: n = 8; miR-150-/--Normal: n = 6; miR-150-/--HFD: n = 8. p < 0.05 (denoted as *, #).
Fig 4Overexpression of miR-150 decreased VEGFR2 protein level in endothelial cells.
The HUVE cells were transfected with miR-150 (has-miR-150) or a scramble microRNA (Scramble) and cultured for an additional 60 hr. The protein levels of c-Myb and VEGFR2 are significantly lower in HUVE cells with overexpression of miR-150 compared to the scramble (student’s t-test; *p < 0.05). n = 4 for each group. (B) The protein level of VEGFR2 is significantly lower in HRECs transfected with has-miR-150 compared to the ones transfected with scramble (student’s t-test; *p < 0.05). n = 4 for each group. (C) The retinas from WT and miR-150-/- mice under normal chow diet (Normal) or HFD were isolated and processed for Western blotting. Some retinas were trypsin-digested to obtain the retinal vasculature followed by immunostaining with the VEGFR2 antibody conjugated with Alexa-488. The scale bar = 100 μm.