| Literature DB >> 28670398 |
Raghav Pandey1, Sebastian Velasquez1, Shazia Durrani1, Min Jiang2, Michelle Neiman3, Jeffrey S Crocker1, Joshua B Benoit4, Jack Rubinstein2, Arghya Paul5, Rafeeq Ph Ahmed1.
Abstract
In mammals, proliferative capacity of cardiomyocytes is lost soon after birth, while zebrafish and other lower organisms like newts are known to regenerate injured hearts even at an adult age. Here, we show that miR-1825 can induce robust proliferation of adult rat cardiomyocytes and can improve cardiac function in-vivo post myocardial infarction. Rat adult cardiomyocytes transfected with miR-1825 showed a significant increase in DNA synthesis, mitosis, cytokinesis, and an increase in cell number when compared to cel-miR-67 transfected control. We also observed a reduction in mitochondrial number and a decrease in ROS and DNA-damage. RNA-sequencing data identified NDUFA10, a key gene involved in the mitochondrial electron transport chain to be a direct target of miR-1825. SiRNA mediated silencing of NDUFA10 showed a significant increase in cardiomyocyte proliferation indicating its role downstream of miRNA-1825. In addition, microRNA microarray results identified miR-1825 to regulate expression of a known proliferation inducing miRNA, miR-199a. We also identified the direct targets of miR-199a, namely p16, Rb1, and Meis2 to be downregulated following miR-1825 transfection. However, miR-199a alone did not have similar proliferation inducing effects as miR-1825, indicating that miR-1825 works through multiple pathways and is a master regulator of cardiomyocyte proliferation. In addition, our in-vivo analysis in animal models of LAD ligation and intra-cardiac miRNA delivery showed proliferation of endogenous cardiomyocytes in the peri-infarcted region and an improvement in heart function. These findings establish miR-1825 as a potential therapeutic agent for induction of cardiomyocyte proliferation and cardiac regeneration, with a significant translational potential.Entities:
Keywords: MicroRNA; adult cardiomyocytes; cardiac regeneration; hydrogel; mitochondrial biogenesis; proliferation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28670398 PMCID: PMC5489910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transl Res Impact factor: 4.060