| Literature DB >> 27902747 |
Caroline M Junker Mentzel1,2, Ferhat Alkan2, Helle Keinicke1, Mette J Jacobsen1, Jan Gorodkin2, Merete Fredholm1,2, Susanna Cirera1.
Abstract
Obesity and its comorbidities are an increasing challenge for both affected individuals and health care systems, worldwide. In obese individuals, perturbation of expression of both protein-coding genes and microRNAs (miRNA) are seen in obesity-relevant tissues (i.e. adipose tissue, liver and skeletal muscle). miRNAs are small non-coding RNA molecules which have important regulatory roles in a wide range of biological processes, including obesity. Rodents are widely used animal models for human diseases including obesity. However, not all research is applicable for human health or diseases. In contrast, pigs are emerging as an excellent animal model for obesity studies, due to their similarities in their metabolism, their digestive tract and their genetics, when compared to humans. The Göttingen minipig is a small sized easy-to-handle pig breed which has been extensively used for modeling human obesity, due to its capacity to develop severe obesity when fed ad libitum. The aim of this study was to identify differentially expressed of protein-coding genes and miRNAs in a Göttingen minipig obesity model. Liver, skeletal muscle and abdominal adipose tissue were sampled from 7 lean and 7 obese minipigs. Differential gene expression was investigated using high-throughput quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) on 90 mRNAs and 72 miRNAs. The results revealed de-regulation of several obesity and inflammation-relevant protein-coding genes and miRNAs in all tissues examined. Many genes that are known to be de-regulated in obese humans were confirmed in the obese minipigs and several of these genes have target sites for miRNAs expressed in the opposing direction of the gene, confirming miRNA-mediated regulation in obesity. These results confirm the translational value of the pig for human obesity studies.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27902747 PMCID: PMC5130236 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Expression of protein coding genes and miRNAs in adipose tissue.
(A) Protein-coding genes and (B) miRNAs with a fold change of > ±1.5 and significant differential expression with a p value < 0.05 (Student´s t test) are shown. The fold change (Obese/Lean) for each significant gene is shown. A positive fold change denotes upregulation in obese Göttingen minipigs and a negative fold change denotes down regulation in obese Göttingen minipigs.
Fig 3Expression of protein coding genes and miRNAs in skeletal muscle.
Protein coding genes (A) and miRNA (B) with a fold change of > ±1.5 and significant differential expression with a p value < 0.05 (Student´s t test) are shown. The fold change (Obese/Lean) for each significant gene is shown. A positive fold change denotes upregulation in obese Göttingen minipigs and a negative denotes downregulation in obese Göttingen minipigs.
Fig 2Expression of protein coding genes and miRNAs in liver.
A) Protein-coding genes and (B) miRNAs with a fold change of > ±1.5 and significant differential expression with a p value < 0.05 (Student´s t test) are shown. The fold change (Obese/Lean) for each significant gene is shown. A positive fold change denotes upregulation in obese Göttingen minipigs and a negative fold change denotes downregulation in obese Göttingen minipigs.
miRNA-target interactions.
| Tissue | miRNA | mRNA | Target in pig | Target in human |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-148a-3p | P, M, R | P | ||
| P, M, R | M, Exp | |||
| miR-125a-5p | P, M, R | P, M, T | ||
| P, M, R | P, M, T, Exp | |||
| miR-30a | P, M, R | - | ||
| P, M, R | P, | |||
| miR-9-5p | P, M, R | P, M, T | ||
| P, M, R | P, M, T | |||
| - | P, D, M, T, Pi | |||
| P, M, R | P | |||
| miR-34a | P, M, R | Exp | ||
| miR-1285 | P, M, R | - | ||
| miR-181d-5p | P, R | P, Exp | ||
| P, M, R | P, M, Exp | |||
| - | T, Exp | |||
| miR-16 | P, R | Exp | ||
| P, M, R | - | |||
| P, M, R | - | |||
| miR-195-5p | P, M, R | - | ||
| miR-1 | P, M, R | - | ||
| P, M, R | - | |||
| miR-195-5p | P, M, R | - | ||
| miR-16 | - | Exp | ||
| P, M, R | - | |||
| P, M, R | P, M, S | |||
| miR-30a | P, M, R | P, | ||
| P, M, R | P, M, T | |||
| miR-9-5p | P, M, R | - | ||
| P, M, R | P, M, T | |||
| P, M, R | P, M, T | |||
| miR-204 | P, R | Exp | ||
| P, R | P, M, Exp | |||
| miR-196b-5p | P, R | Exp | ||
| miR-148a | P, M, R | P | ||
| miR-17-5p | P, M, R | P,M | ||
| P, M, R | P, M, S, T |
miRNA and target genes with support for a miRNA-target site by 3 tools in pig or experimental evidence in humans. The full list of interactions is available in Supplementary file S2 Dataset. P: PITA, M: miRanda, R: RIsearch2 T: TargetScan, D: miRDB, Pi: Pictar, S: STarMiRDB, Exp: Experimental evidence. miRNA annotation follows the miRBase annotation for porcine miRNAs.