| Literature DB >> 30687129 |
Laura Teodori1, Alessandra Costa1, Luigi Campanella2, Maria C Albertini3.
Abstract
Exposure to microgravity induces skeletal muscle disorders including atrophy, muscle force decrease, fiber-type shift. Microgravity also contributes to immune-function alterations and modifies microRNAs (miRs) expression. To understand the link between microgravity-induced skeletal muscle atrophy and immune function deregulation, a bioinformatics study was performed. The web platform MiRNet was used for miRs-targets interaction analysis from previous proteomic studies on human soleus (SOL) and vastus lateralis (VL) muscles. We predicted miRs targeting deregulated gene expression following bed rest as a model of microgravity exposure; namely, let-7a-5p, miR-125b-5p for over-expressed genes in SOL and VL; miR-1-3p, miR-125b-5p and miR-1-3p, miR-95-5p for down-expressed genes in VL and SOL. The predicted miRs have important immune functions, exhibiting a significant role on both inflammation and atrophy. Let-7a down-expression leads to proliferation pathways promotion and differentiation pathway inhibition, whereas miR-1-3p over-expression yields anti-proliferative effect, promoting early differentiation. Such conflicting signals could lead to impairment between proliferation and differentiation in skeletal muscles. Moreover, promotion of an M2-like macrophage phenotype (IL-13, IL-10) by let-7a down-regulation and simultaneous promotion of an M1-like macrophage (IL-6, TNF-α) phenotype through the over-expression of EEF2 lead to a deregulation between M1/M2 tuning, that is responsible for a first pro-inflammatory/proliferative phase followed by an anti-inflammatory pro-myogenic phase during skeletal muscle regeneration after injury. These observations are important to understand the mechanism by which inflammation may play a significant role in skeletal muscle dysfunction in spaceflights, providing new links between immune response and skeletal muscle deregulation, which may be useful to further investigate possible therapeutic intervention.Entities:
Keywords: bioinformatics; immune function deregulation; miRs prediction; skeletal muscle atrophy; space flight; web-based platform
Year: 2019 PMID: 30687129 PMCID: PMC6335973 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.01926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Results obtained by miRNet analysis.
| Deregulated proteins | microRNAs (gene symbols; gene IDs) |
|---|---|
| VL Over-expressed | miR-484 |
| miR-92a-3p | |
| miR-16-5p | |
| miR-615-3p | |
| miR-222-3p | |
| miR-320a | |
| VL Down-expressed | miR-5196-5p |
| miR-4747-5p | |
| SOL Over-expressed | miR-222-3p |
| miR-let-7b-5p | |
| miR-34a-5p | |
| miR-320a | |
| SOL Down-expressed | miR-30c-5p |
| miR-1-3p | |
| miR-30a-5p | |
FIGURE 1Hypothesis of the conflicting signals responsible for atrophy observed during reduced gravity environment. Down-expressed genes, microRNAs and inhibited signals (arrows) are indicated in red, while over-expressed genes, microRNAs and activated signals (arrows) are indicated in green. Black lines indicate the possible interactions between mRNA and microRNAs evidenced by the miRNet analysis.