| Literature DB >> 31752983 |
Jeremy Kah Sheng Pang1,2, Qian Hua Phua1, Boon-Seng Soh3,4,5.
Abstract
Development of the complex human heart is tightly regulated at multiple levels, maintaining multipotency and proliferative state in the embryonic cardiovascular progenitors and thereafter suppressing progenitor characteristics to allow for terminal differentiation and maturation. Small regulatory microRNAs (miRNAs) are at the level of post-transcriptional gene suppressors, which enhance the degradation or decay of their target protein-coding mRNAs. These miRNAs are known to play roles in a large number of biological events, cardiovascular development being no exception. A number of critical cardiac-specific miRNAs have been identified, of which structural developmental defects have been linked to dysregulation of miRNAs in the proliferating cardiac stem cells. These miRNAs present in the stem cell niche are lost when the cardiac progenitors terminally differentiate, resulting in the postnatal mitotic arrest of the heart. Therapeutic applications of these miRNAs extend to the realm of heart failure, whereby the death of heart cells in the ageing heart cannot be replaced due to the arrest of cell division. By utilizing miRNA therapy to control cell cycling, the regenerative potential of matured myocardium can be restored. This review will address the various cardiac progenitor-related miRNAs that control the development and proliferative potential of the heart.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac development; Cardiac regeneration and development; Cardiovascular progenitors; MicroRNA; Stem cell niche
Year: 2019 PMID: 31752983 PMCID: PMC6868784 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-019-1451-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Involvement of microRNAs in the various phases of the heart covered in this review—maturation, disease progression and regeneration
Fig. 2Schematic illustration of miRNA biogenesis
miRNA with known targets and their functions in animal models
| miRNA | Animal model | Target | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-1 | Mice | Hand2 | Downregulate ventricular cardiomyocytes expansion, promote cardiac differentiation | [ |
| Mice | Delta-1 | Promotes mesoderm formation, cardiac lineage determination | [ | |
| Delta | Regulates expansion of cardiac and muscle progenitor cells | [ | ||
| miR-17-92 | Mice | Isl1, Tbx1 | Regulation proliferation of cardiac progenitors | [ |
| miR-130a | Mice | Fog-2 | Regulates myocardium growth | [ |
| miR-133a | Mice | Serum response factor, cyclin D2 | Negatively regulate cardiomyocyte proliferation | [ |
| miR-138 | Zebrafish | Cspg2 | Regulates ventricular cardiomyocyte maturation | [ |
Fig. 3Previously known miRNAs and their associated genes involved in embryonic heart development into cardiomyocytes
miRNAs with known associations to cardiovascular diseases
| miRNA | Animal models | Targets | Level of expression | Cardiovascular diseases | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-1 | Mice | Hand2 | Downregulated | Ventricular septal defect | [ |
| Mice | Mef2a, calmodulin | Downregulated | Cardiac hypertrophy | [ | |
| Rat | Kcnj2 | Upregulated | Atrial fibrillation | [ | |
| Downregulated | Ventricular arrhythmia | [ | |||
| Human | GJA1, SOX9 | Downregulated | Ventricular septal defect | [ | |
| miR-21 | Human | – | Upregulated | Myocardial infarction | [ |
| miR-23a | Mice | Foxo3a | Upregulated | Cardiac hypertrophy | [ |
| miR-29b | Human | – | Upregulated | Myocardial infarction | [ |
| miR-126 | Mice | Spred1, PI3KR2a | Downregulated | Defective angiogenesis, leaky and fragile vessels | [ |
| miR-181 | Human | BMPR2 | Upregulated | Ventricular septal defect | [ |
| miR-195 | Human | CHECK1 | Upregulated | Ventricular septal defect | [ |
| miR-328 | Mice, rat | Cacna1c, Cacnb2 | Upregulated | Atrial fibrillation | [ |
| miR-421 | Human | SOX2 | Upregulated | Tetralogy of fallot | [ |