| Literature DB >> 33563971 |
Qinghua Li1, Yangyang Han2,3, Peng Xu4, Lingxuan Yin2,3, Yanru Si2,3, Cuijuan Zhang5, Yuhan Meng6, Weiguo Feng2,3, Zhifang Pan2,3, Zhiqin Gao2,3, Jie Li5, Weiwei Yang7,8.
Abstract
Preeclampsia (PE) is a life-threatening disorder of human pregnancy affecting 5-8% of all pregnancies. Currently, PE remains an elusive complicated and heterogenous medical condition with no early marker or symptoms is recognized for this serious pregnancy complications. Here, we profiled the plasma miRNA expression patterns associated with preeclampsia and found 16 miRNAs were deregulated (p < 0.01) in patients who later developed PE. Circulating hsa-miR-125b was aberrantly upregulated in early pregnancy and significantly reduced after delivery in preeclampsia. We then investigated the underlying molecular mechanisms between miR-125b and PE in vitro. We found that upregulated miR-125b can target KCNA1 to inhibit trophoblast invasion in human trophoblast cells. Moreover, overexpression of miR-125b in HUVECs impaired endothelial cell function through GPC1. The findings indicated that upregulated miR-125b leads to impaired placentation, and an increased risk of preeclampsia, Our studies provide novel insights into the underlying mechanisms on the association of miR-125b in early pregnancy and risk of PE, miR-125b might be a more specific predictive marker and a safe therapeutic target for treating patients with PE.Year: 2020 PMID: 33563971 DOI: 10.1038/s41420-020-0269-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Discov ISSN: 2058-7716