| Literature DB >> 29209617 |
Solenne Paiva1, Onnik Agbulut1.
Abstract
At present, cardiovascular diseases are depicted to be the leading cause of death worldwide according to the World Health Organization. In the future, projections predict that ischemic heart disease will persist in the top main causes of illness. Within this alarming context, some tiny master regulators of gene expression programs, namely, microRNAs (miRNAs) carry three promising potentials. In fact, miRNAs can prove to be useful not only in terms of biomarkers allowing heart injury detection but also in terms of therapeutics to overcome limitations of past strategies and treat the lesions. In a more creative approach, they can even be used in the area of human engineered cardiac tissues as maturation tools for cardiomyocytes (CMs) derived from pluripotent stem cell. Very promising not only for patient-specific cell-based therapies but also to develop biomimetic microsystems for disease modeling and drug screening, these cells greatly contribute to personalized medicine. To get into the heart of the matter, the focus of this review lies primarily on miRNAs as acute myocardial infarction (AMI) biomarkers. Only large cohort studies comprising over 100 individuals to reach a potent statistical value were considered. Certain miRNAs appeared to possibly complement protein-based biomarkers and classical risk factors. Some were even described to bear potential in the discrimination of similar symptomatic pathologies. However, differences between pre-analytical and analytical approaches substantially influenced miRNA data. Further supported by meta-analysis studies, this problem had to be addressed. A detailed critical analysis of each step to define miRNAs biomarker potential is provided to inspire a future improved universal strategy. Interestingly, a recurrent set of cardiomyocyte-enriched miRNAs was found, namely, miR-1; miR-133; miR-208a/b; and miR-499a. Each member of this myomiRs group displayed promising roles either individually or in combination as AMI diagnostic or prognostic biomarkers. Furthermore, a precise combo was shown to be powerful enough to transdifferentiate human fibroblasts into CMs opening doors in the therapeutics. Following these discoveries, they also emerged as optional tools to transfect in order to mature CMs derived from pluripotent stem cells. Ultimately, the multiple potentials carried by the myomiRs miR-1; miR-133; miR-208a/b; and miR-499a still remain to be fully unveiled.Entities:
Keywords: acute myocardial infarction; cardiac biomarkers; cardiomyocytes maturation; microRNAs; regenerative medicine
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209617 PMCID: PMC5701911 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2017.00073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1Schematic representation of the biogenesis and functions of microRNAs (miRNAs). miRNAs genes are transcribed in the nucleus by RNA Polymerase II as long pri-miRNA transcripts that are 5′ capped and 3′ polyadenylated. The pri-miRNA sequence folds into a hairpin loop structure that is recognized and processed by the microprocessor complex Drosha-DGCR8, generating a pre-miRNA (Canonical pathway). Mirtrons, a class of unconventional miRNAs are encoded in small introns and do not require Drosha processing (alternative pathway). In this alternative pathway, the intron lariat is excised by the spliceosome and refolded into a pre-miRNA hairpin loop. The pre-miRNA is then exported from the nucleus to the cytoplasm by exportin 5, where it is further cropped by Dicer in complex with TRBP, yielding a ~21–23 nucleotides double-stranded RNA called miRNA/miRNA* duplex. Next, the functional mature miRNA (miR) is loaded together with AGO proteins into the RISC complex, guiding RISC to silence by Watson–Crick complementarity a target mRNA through translational repression, deadenylation process, or degradation. DGCR8, DiGeorge syndrome chromosomal (or critical) region 8 subunit; TRBP, TAR RNA binding protein; AGO, Argonaute; RISC, RNA-induced silencing complex.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the microRNAs (miRNAs) secretion. miRNAs can be exported bound to proteins such as RISC and Argonaute 2, or even in association with high-density lipoprotein (HDL) lipoprotein complexes as well as in the form of miRNAs packed in extracellular vesicles, such as microvesicles and exosomes. DGCR8, DiGeorge syndrome chromosomal (or critical) region 8 subunit; TRBP, TAR RNA binding protein; AGO, Argonaute; RISC, RNA-induced silencing complex.
List of large cohort studies on cardiomyocytes (CMs)-enriched microRNAs (miRNAs) as AMI biomarkers.
| Year | Reference | Total participant | Sample | miRNAs | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Ai et al. ( | 159 | Plasma | miR-1 | qPCR |
| 2011 | Widera et al. ( | 444 | Plasma | CMs-enriched miRNAs | qPCR |
| 2012 | Devaux et al. ( | 597 | Plasma | CMs-enriched miRNAs | qPCR |
| 2012 | Zampetaki et al. ( | 820 (Bruneck cohort) | Whole blood | All | Microarrays and qPCR |
| 2013 | Li et al. ( | 99 | Plasma | CMs-enriched miRNAs | qPCR |
| 2013 | Gidlöf et al. ( | 424 | Plasma | CMs-enriched miRNAs | qPCR normalized to miR-17 |
| 2013 | Li et al. ( | 399 | Serum | All | Sequencing and qPCR |
| 2013 | Olivieri et al. ( | 272 (geriatric population) | Plasma | CMs-enriched miRNAs | qPCR normalized to miR-17 |
| 2014 | Zeller et al. ( | 138 | Serum | All | Microarrays and qPCR |
| 2014 | Yao et al. ( | 120 | Plasma | miR-133a/b and miR-499 | qPCR |
| 2014 | Pilbrow et al. ( | 300 | Plasma | 375 miRNAs | qPCR |
| 2016 | Yuan et al. ( | 332 | Liu | miR-133a | qPCR |
| 2016 | Cortez-Dias et al. ( | 160 | Serum | CMs-enriched miRNAs and miR-122-5p | qPCR |
| 2017 | Liu et al. ( | 260 | Plasma | miR-208b | qPCR |
AMI, acute myocardial infarction; cTnT, cardiac troponin T; cTnI, cardiac troponin I; hs-cTnT, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T; qPCR, real-time polymerase chain reaction; STEMI, ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction; NSTEMI, non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.
Critical analysis of microRNAs (miRNAs) as cardiac biomarkers.
| Ups | Downs |
|---|---|
| High stability in various body fluids | No established reference threshold value in the population |
| Presence of highly sensitive detection method (real-time polymerase chain reaction) | No standerdized method and material used for RNA preparation |
| Equal chemistry for all miRNAs: simpler and more cost effective for technological development | No fully satisfactory method of normalization |
| Option to combine multiple miRNAs to increase the result specificity | Plasma levels affected by kidney function, various pathologies and certain medications |