| Literature DB >> 32009226 |
Estanislao Navarro1,2, Adrian Mallén3, Josep M Cruzado3, Joan Torras3, Miguel Hueso4.
Abstract
Completion of the human genome sequencing project highlighted the richness of the cellular RNA world, and opened the door to the discovery of a plethora of short and long non-coding RNAs (the dark transcriptome) with regulatory or structural potential, which shifted the balance of pathological gene alterations from coding to non-coding RNAs. Thus, disease risk assessment currently has to also evaluate the expression of new RNAs such as small micro RNAs (miRNAs), long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), circular RNAs (circRNAs), competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs), retrogressed elements, 3'UTRs of mRNAs, etc. We are interested in the pathogenic mechanisms of atherosclerosis (ATH) progression in patients suffering Chronic Kidney Disease, and in this review, we will focus in the role of the dark transcriptome (non-coding RNAs) in ATH progression. We will focus in miRNAs and in the formation of regulatory axes or networks with their mRNA targets and with the lncRNAs that function as miRNA sponges or competitive inhibitors of miRNA activity. In this sense, we will pay special attention to retrogressed genomic elements, such as processed pseudogenes and Alu repeated elements, that have been recently seen to also function as miRNA sponges, as well as to the use or miRNA derivatives in gene silencing, anti-ATH therapies. Along the review, we will discuss technical developments associated to research in lncRNAs, from sequencing technologies to databases, repositories and algorithms to predict miRNA targets, as well as new approaches to miRNA function, such as integrative or enrichment analysis and their potential to unveil RNA regulatory networks.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative 3′UTRs; Atherosclerosis; Dark transcriptome; Regulatory RNA networks; lncRNAs; miRNA
Year: 2020 PMID: 32009226 PMCID: PMC6995802 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-020-0256-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Fig. 1The “central dogma” revisited. Shown are new additions to the central dogma (boxed), highlighting the fundamental role of miRNAs in the regulation of gene expression. This work reviews the functional relationships among the RNAs drawn in red. Black arrows means transcription or translation, double-headed red arrows mean mutual interactions, red arrows functional interactions (in the case of pseudogenes and Alu elements, retroinsertion) and dotted lines refer to the histone code and chromatin modifications
Sequence databases and repositories
| Sequence repository or database | Web page address |
|---|---|
| Genbank | - |
| DDBJ, DNA Databank of Japan | - |
| ENA, European Nucleotide Archive | - |
| INSDC (and Sequence Read Archives) | - |
| NCBI Reference Sequence Database (Refseq) | - |
| Ensembl Genome Viewer | - |
| Genome Data Viewer | - |
| miRBase | - |
| LNCipedia Project (database of human ncRNAs) | - |
| NONCODE (knowledge database of ncRNAs) | - |
| RNA central (ncRNA sequence database) | - |
| ENCODE (encyclopedia of DNA elements) | - |
| FANTOM (functional annotation of the human genome | - |
Shown are repositories, databases data viewers of nucleic acids. This is not an exhaustive list, and the selection only reflects authors’ preferences
Fig. 2Impact of alternatively expressed 3′UTRs on their interaction with miRNAs. Shown are changes in the structure of the 3′UTRs with the potential to impact on the binding of specific miRNAs. 1. The existence of alternative polyadenylation signals originate 3′UTRs of different lengths and different potential for miRNA binding. 2. Alternative exons encoding different 3′UTRs differ in their potential for miRNA binding. 3. Exonic switch. In the case of the Cd34 gene, an internal cryptic splice site (CSS) activates two different stop codons and generates two different exons 8, with the consequence that in one Cd34 isoform the binding site for a number of miRNAs is located in the 3′UTR, while in the other isoform it is located inside the CDS (taken from [87])
ATH-associated miRNAs, mRNA targets and the effects of their expression on ATH progression
| miRNA | Target mRNA/sa | Effect of miRNAs on ATH progression | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-9 | Oxidized low-density lipoprotein (lectin-like) receptor 1 (OLR1) | ApoE-null mice (U/R protective) | [ |
| miR-23a-5p | ATP-binding cassette transporter A1/G1 ABCA1/G1 | U/R promotes macrophage-derived foam cell formation | [ |
| miR-23b | Forkhead Box O4 (FoxO4) | U/R inhibited VSMC proliferation and migration | [ |
| miR-25-3p | A disintegrin and metalloprotease 10 (Adam10) | ApoE-null mice (U/R protective) | [ |
| miR-30-3p | Transcription factor 21 (TCF21) | U/R increases viability of HUVEC cells | [ |
| miR-34a | BCL2 apoptosis regulator (BCL2) | D/R facilitated growth and blocked apoptosis in HAECs | [ |
| miR-98 | Receptor for ox-LDL 1 (LOX-1) | D/R inhibited foam cell formation and lipid accumulation in aortas of ApoE-null mice | [ |
| miR-99a-5p | Homeobox A1 (HOXA1) | U/R inhibits proliferation and invasion of ASMCs | [ |
| miR-103 | Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) | D/R suppressed inflammation and ERS in ECs from ApoE-null mice | [ |
| miR-124 | MCL-1 apoptosis regulator (MCL-1) | U/R represses viability, migration and capillary structure formation in HMEC-1 cells. Sponged by lncRNA HULC | [ |
| miR-135b | Erythropoietin receptor (EPOR) | C57BL/6J male mice (D/R protective) | [ |
| miR-142-3p | Rapamycin-insensitive companion of MTOR (Rictor) | D/R inhibited ECs apoptosis and ATH development in HAECs | [ |
| miR-223 | Insulin growth factor-1 receptor (IGF-1R) | U/R inhibits foam cell formation in VSMCs of human ATH patients | [ |
| miR-338-3p | BMP and activin membrane-bound inhibitor (BAMBI) | D/R promoted viability and inhibited apoptosis in ox-LDL-induced HUVECs | [ |
| miR-365b-3p | A disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs 1 (ADAMTS1) | U/R attenuated PDGF-BB-induced proliferation and migration of HCASMCs | [ |
| miR-370 | Forkhead Box 1 (FOXO1) | U/R promotes invasion and proliferation of HUVECs | [ |
| miR-370 | Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) | U/R inhibits IL-6 and IL-1β expression and ROS levels in THP-1 cells | [ |
| miR-451 | 14-3-3 ζ (YWHAZ) | U/R improves intimal thickening in rats following vascular injury | [ |
| miR-590 | Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) | U/R inhibited atherosclerotic lesion in ApoE-null mice and HAECS | [ |
| miR-647 | Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) | Upregulated in HA-VSMCs | [ |
U/R Up-regulation, D/R downregulation
Abbreviations of the cells and cell lines used in the works referenced: HA-VSMCs human aorta vascular smooth muscle cells, ASMCs human aortic smooth muscle cells, HCASMCs human coronary artery smooth muscle cells, HUVECs human umbilical vein endothelial cells, HAECs human aortic endothelial cells, HMEC-1 human microvascular endothelial cell line, ERS endoplasmic reticulum stress
aAll the target mRNAs have been validated by luciferase reporter assays
lncRNA:miRNA:mRNA axis in atherosclerosis progression
| lncRNA | Sponged miRNA | Target mRNA | Regulated pathway in ATH progression | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MALAT1 | miR-204 | SMAD4 | Osteogenic differentiation in CAVD | [ |
| MALAT1 | miR-320a | FOXM1 | Proliferation of HUVECs | [ |
| MIAT | miR-181b | STAT3 | Proliferation and apoptosis in HA-VSMC cells | [ |
| MIAT | miR-149-5p | CD47 | Promoted atherosclerosis progression | [ |
| MEG3 | miR-26a | SMAD1 | Proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells | [ |
| MEG3 | miR-223 | NLRP3 | Pyroptosis in HAEC cells | [ |
| DIGIT | miR-134 | Bmi-1 | Viability, migration and apoptosis of HMEC-1 cells | [ |
| GSA5 | miR-221 | MMPs | Inflammatory response in THP-1 cells | [ |
| Linc00657 | miR-590-3p | HIF-1α | Angiogenesis | [ |
| TUG1 | miR-204-5p | Runx2 | Osteoblast differentiation in human aortic VICs | [ |
| Linc00299 | miR-490-3p | AURKA | Proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells and HUVECs | [ |
| UCA1 | miR-26a | PTEN | Proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells | [ |
| Linc00305 | miR-136 | n.d. | Proliferation and apoptosis of HUVECs | [ |
| MKI67IP-3 | Let-7e | IκBβ | Inflammatory response in VECs | [ |
| H19 | miR-148b | WNT1 | Proliferation and apoptosis of HA-VSMCs | [ |
| RNCR3 | miR-185-5p | KLF2 | Proliferation of ECs and VSMCs | [ |
For each lncRNA shown are also a sponged miRNA and one mRNA target of this last, as well as the effect of the RNA network on ATH progression. n.d. not determined
Abbreviations of the tissues, cells and cell lines used in the works referenced: CAVD calcified aortic valve disease, HA-VSMCs human aorta vascular smooth muscle cells, HUVECs human umbilical vein endothelial cells, HAECs human aortic endothelial cells, HMEC-1 human microvascular endothelial cell line, VICs human valve interstitial cells, VECs vascular endothelial cells
Fig. 3Role of Alu elements in the regulation of miRNA activity. Shown are nuclear Alu elements transcribed from its own RNA pol III promoter in the case of being independent transcriptional units (left), or from an RNA pol II promoter in the case of being integrated inside another gene. In both cases these can behave as miRNA sponges by interacting with miRNAs. Some individual Alu elements can retroinsert into intergenic regions or inside other transcriptional units (taken from [1])
Resources for miRNA research
| Algorithm/database | Web address | Utility | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| miRBase | MiRNA database | [ | |
| miRTarbase | MiRNA target interaction database | [ | |
| Tarbase | MiRNA target interaction database | [ | |
| DIANA | MiRNA research tools | [ | |
| doRiNA | Database of RNA interactions | [ | |
| miRanda | MiRNA target prediction. No longer | [ | |
| mirBridge | n.a. | MiRNA target prediction | [ |
| miRDB | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| miRmap | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| miRNAMap | MiRNA research tools | [ | |
| PicTar | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| PITA | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| RegRNA | RNA-RNA interaction regions | [ | |
| rna22 | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| RNAhybrid | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| Targetscan | MiRNA target prediction | [ | |
| miRSystem | Comprehensive analysis | [ | |
| miRWalk2.0 | Comprehensive analysis | [ | |
| CORNA | Integrated analysis | [ | |
| MMIA | Integrated analysis | [ | |
| miARma-seq | Integrated analysis | [ | |
| DIANA-LncBase | Predicted microRNA targets on lncRNAs | [ |
Shown are algorithms and databases for the prediction of miRNA targets, and for the comprehensive and integrated analysis of miRNA/mRNA interactions (see main text). This is not an exhaustive list, and the selection only reflects author’s preferences