| Literature DB >> 32609094 |
Hao Wang1, Yuan Zhou2, Zhongnan Yin3, Li Chen1, Ling Jin3, Qinghua Cui2, Lixiang Xue1,3.
Abstract
Circulating miRNAs have received extensive attention as non-invasive biomarkers for prediction and diagnosis of disease. However, most samples have been obtained from peripheral venous blood. To evaluate whether peripheral venous miRNAs represent circulating miRNAs from all blood vessels under a given condition, such as aging, we compared the miRNA profiles of venous and arterial plasma between young and aged rats by Illumina next-generation sequencing. The DEseq2 tool was used to obtain differentially-expressed miRNAs. We observed 105 aging-related deregulated miRNAs in vein and 62 in artery, which were highly associated with cell survival and inflammation, respectively. On the other hand, the young and aged groups exhibited a unique arterial-venous bias. There were 54 differentially-expressed miRNAs in the young group and 42 in the aged group; only 8 miRNAs were shared. Further transcriptional factors enrichment analysis found that the shared miRNAs could be partially upregulated by NF-κB and SIRT1. These transcriptional factors could be organ-specific and/or regulated in physiological and aging states as possible causal factors. This study suggested the potential application of circulating miRNAs, which reflect the systematic response to certain conditions, such as aging, and the importance of origin selection for candidate circulating miRNAs.Entities:
Keywords: aging; arterial-venous; circulating miRNA; transcriptional factor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32609094 PMCID: PMC7377886 DOI: 10.18632/aging.103385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682
Figure 1Venn diagram showing the overlaps between deregulated miRNAs in different comparisons. vs.: versus; A: arterial; V: venous.
Figure 2Functional and disease associations of deregulated arterial and venous miRNAs between aged and young rats. (A) Bar plot showing the functional association of deregulated venous miRNAs between aged and young rats. (B) Bubble plot showing the disease association of deregulated venous miRNAs between aged and young rats. (C) Bar plot showing the functional association of deregulated arterial miRNAs between aged and young rats. (D) Bubble plot showing the disease association of deregulated arterial miRNAs between aged and young rats. The number beside the function terms indicates the number of differentially expressed miRNAs associated with the corresponding function.
Figure 3The enriched functions of deregulated miRNAs between arterial and venous blood samples and their target genes. (A) Bar plot showing the functional association of differentially-expressed miRNAs between arterial and venous plasma from young rats. (B) Bar plot showing the functional association of deregulated miRNAs between arterial and venous plasma from aged rats. (C) Heatmap showing the genes intensively regulated by deregulated genes in young rats and their functional association. The interaction between miRNAs and their target genes is indicated by an orange box, while the presence of the target gene in specific pathways is indicated by a blue box. (D) Heatmap showing the genes intensively regulated by deregulated genes in aged rats and their functional association. The number beside the function terms indicates the number of differentially expressed miRNAs associated with the corresponding function.
Figure 4Over-represented target genes and transcription factors of the miRNAs showed consistent or reversed artery-versus-venous deregulation between young and aged rats. (A) Heatmap of genes intensively regulated by miRNAs showing reversed deregulation and their functional association. (B) Network view of the interactions between miRNAs showing consistent deregulation and their over-represented upstream transcription factors. (C) Network view of the interactions between miRNAs showing reversed deregulation and their over-represented upstream transcription factors.
Figure 5Validation of consistent and reversed arterial-versus-venous deregulated miRNAs between young and aged rats. (A–B) levels of miR-223-5p in venous and arterial plasma of young (A) and aged (B) rats. (C–D) levels of miR-196a-5p in venous and arterial plasma of young (C) and aged (D) rats. (E–F) levels of miR-503-3p in venous and arterial plasma of young (E) and aged (F) rats. (G–H) levels of miR-136-3p in the venous and arterial plasma of young (G) and aged (H) rats. Data are represented as mean ± SEM. *: p<0.05.