| Literature DB >> 30518697 |
Eugene L Asahchop1, William G Branton1, Anand Krishnan1, Patricia A Chen1, Dong Yang2, Linglong Kong2, Douglas W Zochodne1,3, Bruce J Brew4, M John Gill5, Christopher Power1,3,5.
Abstract
Symptomatic distal sensory polyneuropathy (sDSP) is common and debilitating in people with HIV/AIDS, leading to neuropathic pain, although the condition's cause is unknown. To investigate biomarkers and associated pathogenic mechanisms for sDSP, we examined plasma miRNA profiles in HIV/AIDS patients with sDSP or without sDSP in 2 independent cohorts together with assessing related pathogenic effects. Several miRNAs were found to be increased in the Discovery Cohort (sDSP, n = 29; non-DSP, n = 40) by array analyses and were increased in patients with sDSP compared with patients without sDSP. miR-455-3p displayed a 12-fold median increase in the sDSP group, which was confirmed by machine learning analyses and verified by reverse transcription PCR. In the Validation Cohort (sDSP n = 16, non-DSP n = 20, healthy controls n = 15), significant upregulation of miR-455-3p was also observed in the sDSP group. Bioinformatics revealed that miR-455-3p targeted multiple host genes implicated in peripheral nerve maintenance, including nerve growth factor (NGF) and related genes. Transfection of cultured human dorsal root ganglia with miR-455-3p showed a concentration-dependent reduction in neuronal β-III tubulin expression. Human neurons transfected with miR-455-3p demonstrated reduced neurite outgrowth and NGF expression that was reversed by anti-miR-455-3p antagomir cotreatment. miR-455-3p represents a potential biomarker for HIV-associated sDSP and might also exert pathogenic effects leading to sDSP.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS/HIV; Bioinformatics; Neurodegeneration; Neuroscience; growth factors
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30518697 PMCID: PMC6328026 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.122450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708