| Literature DB >> 34060005 |
Zhaohui Ouyang1, Ke Wei2.
Abstract
Ischemic heart disease is one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality in the world. In adult mammalian hearts, most cardiomyocytes are terminally differentiated and have extremely limited capacity of proliferation, making it impossible to regenerate the heart after injuries such as myocardial infarction. MicroRNAs (miRNAs), a class of non-coding single-stranded RNA, which are involved in mRNA silencing and the regulation of post-transcriptional gene expression, have been shown to play a crucial role in cardiac development and cardiomyocyte proliferation. Muscle specific miRNAs such as miR-1 are key regulators of cardiomyocyte maturation and growth, while miR-199-3p and other miRNAs display potent activity to induce proliferation of cardiomyocytes. Given their small size and relative pleiotropic effects, miRNAs have gained significant attraction as promising therapeutic targets or tools in cardiac regeneration. Increasing number of studies demonstrated that overexpression or inhibition of specific miRNAs could induce cardiomyocyte proliferation and cardiac regeneration. Some common targets of pro-proliferation miRNAs, such as the Hippo-Yap signaling pathway, were identified in multiple species, highlighting the power of miRNAs as probes to dissect core regulators of biological processes. A number of miRNAs have been shown to improve heart function after myocardial infarction in mice, and one trial in swine also demonstrated promising outcomes. However, technical difficulties, especially in delivery methods, and adverse effects, such as uncontrolled proliferation, remain. In this review, we summarize the recent progress in miRNA research in cardiac development and regeneration, examine the mechanisms of miRNA regulating cardiomyocyte proliferation, and discuss its potential as a new strategy for cardiac regeneration therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cardiomyocyte; development; heart; microRNA; proliferation; regeneration
Year: 2021 PMID: 34060005 PMCID: PMC8166991 DOI: 10.1186/s13619-021-00077-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Regen ISSN: 2045-9769
Fig. 1Summary of miRNAs regulating cardiac development. a miRNAs regulating embryonic cardiac development, postnatal growth, as well as adult heart homeostasis in mouse. b miRNAs regulating cardiac development in zebrafish. c miRNAs regulating cardiomyocyte differentiation from ESCs/iPSCs in vitro. hpf: hour post fertilization; dpf: day post fertilization; ESCs: embryonic stem cells; iPSCs: induced pluripotent stem cells.
MicroRNAs inhibiting cardiomyocyte proliferation and cardiac regeneration
| miRNA | Experimental models | Major findings | Targets | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-1 | β-MHC-miR-1 transgenic mice | Overexpression of miR-1 decreases the number of cycling cardiomyocytes, results in developmental arrest at E13.5, secondary to thin-walled ventricles and heart failure. | (Zhao et al. | |
| miR-1-2−/− mice | miR-1-2−/− mutants display thickening of the walls of the heart, while the increased weight may be due to hyperplasia. | |||
| miR-1 dKO mice | miR-1 dKO neonatal mice display proliferating cardiomyocytes. | |||
| neonatal mouse CMs | miR-1 represses cardiomyocyte G1/S phase transition. | |||
| miR133a | miR-133a double-mutant mice | miR-133a double-mutant mice display late embryonic or neonatal lethality due to VSDs, while the surviving mutant mice display severe deficits in cardiac contractility and die from heart failure and sudden death. The absence of miR-133a expression results in ectopic expression of smooth muscle genes in the heart and aberrant cardiomyocyte proliferation. | (Liu et al. | |
| miR-15 family (miR-195, miR-15) | βMHC-miR-195 transgenic mice | Overexpression of miR-195 in the embryonic heart causes ventricular hypoplasia and ventricular septal defects. | (Porrello et al. | |
| delivery of anti- miR-15 family (LNA- miR-15 family) to neonatal mice | Post-natal inhibition of miR-15 family induces cardiomyocyte proliferation, as well as cardiomyocytes displaying disorganized sarcomeric structures. | |||
| neonatal CMs | Inhibition of miR-15 induces cardiomyocyte viability in response to hypoxia | |||
| delivery of miR-15 anti-miRs in hearts of both mice and pigs | Inhibition of miR-15 family protectes against cardiac ischemic injury | |||
| delivery of anti- miR-15 family (LNA- miR-15 family) to neonatal mice before MI | Inhibition of the miR-15 family induces cardiomyocyte proliferation and improves left ventricular systolic function. | |||
| miR-29a | H9c2 cell line | Overexpression of miR-29a suppresses proliferation of H9c2 cell line. | (Cao et al. | |
| miR-99/100 and Let-7a/c | adult zebrafish | Injecting miR-99/100 mimics blocks cardiac regeneration, and injecting antagomir against miR-99/100 promots cardiomyocyte proliferation and cardiac growth | (Aguirre et al. | |
| a murine model of MI | Inhibition of miR-99/100 and Let-7a/c induces the myocardial tissue to a partially dedifferentiated proliferative state after cardiac injury. | |||
| miR-101a | adult zebrafish | Inhibition of miR-101a levels at the onset of cardiac injury enhances CM proliferation, while prolonged inhibition of miR-101a activity stimulates new muscle synthesis but with defects in scar tissue clearance. | (Beauchemin et al. | |
| miR-34a | delivery of miR-34a mimic to the myocardium at the time of MI | Overexpression of miR-34a inhibits functional post-MI recovery in neonatal mouse hearts. | (Yang et al. | |
| delivery of anti-miR-34a (LNA-34a) following MI in adult mice | Inhibition of miR-34a improves cardiac function in adult hearts post-MI. | |||
| miR-128 | cardiacspecific miR-128 overexpression mice | Overexpression of miR-128 impairs cardiac homeostasis, and inhibits neonatal cardiac regeneration. | (Huang et al. | |
| cardiac-specific miR-128 knockout mice | Inhibition of miR-128 promotes adult cardiac regeneration. | |||
| Let-7i-5p | neonatal mouse CMs | Let-7i-5p negatively regulates cardiomyocyte proliferation | (Hu et al. | |
| Ad-let-7i-5p/ AAV9-anti-let-7i-5p was delivered to mice | Overexpression of Let-7i-5p inhibits cardiomyocyte proliferation while inhibition of Let-7i-5p promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation. | |||
| miR-216a | neonatal mouse CMs | miR-216a negatively regulates cardiomyocyte proliferation | (Wang et al. |
MicroRNAs promoting cardiomyocyte proliferation and cardiac regeneration
| miRNA | Experimental models | Major findings | Targets | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-590-3p | neonatal rat CMs, neonatal mouse CMs, postnatal rat (P7) CMs | Overexpression of miR-590-3p increases CM proliferation. | Hippo pathway | (Eulalio et al. |
| delivery of hsa-miR-590-3p complexed with a lipid transfection reagent into the heart of neonatal rats | The left ventricle walls of the hearts appeared markedly thicker with increases CM proliferation. | |||
| delivery of AAV9-miR590 precursor miRNAs into the neonatal mice | At 12 days after injection, the hearts were morphologically normal, but significantly enlarged. | |||
| delivery of AAV9-miR590 into the adult mice after infarction | The infarct size was significantly reduced in mice. | |||
| miR-199a-3p | neonatal rat CMs, neonatal mouse CMs, postnatal rat (P7) CMs | Overexpression of miR-199a-3p increases CM proliferation. | Hippo pathway | (Eulalio et al. |
| delivery of hsa-miR-199a-3p complexed with a lipid transfection reagent into the heart of neonatal rats | The left ventricle walls of the hearts appeared markedly thicker with increases CM proliferation. | |||
| delivery of AAV9-miR-199a-3p precursor miRNAs into the neonatal mice | At 12 days after injection, the hearts of these animals were morphologically normal, but significantly enlarged. | |||
| delivery of AAV9-miR-199a-3p into the adult mice after infarction | The infarct size was significantly reduced in mice. | |||
| delivery of AAV9-miR 199a-1 pri-miRNA into the infarcted pig hearts | The treated animals showed marked improvements in both global and regional contractility, increased muscle mass and reduced scar size. At longer follow-up, however, persistent and uncontrolled expression of the microRNA resulted in sudden arrhythmic death of most of the treated pigs. | |||
| miR-17-92 Cluster | miR-17-92-cKO mice | miR-17-92 is sufficient to induce cardiomyocyte proliferation in embryonic and postnatal hearts. | (Chen et al. | |
| cardiac-specific overexpression miR-17-92 transgenic mice | Overexpression of miR-17-92 induces cardiomyocyte proliferation in embryonic, neonatal and adult hearts. Overexpression of miR-17-92 in adult cardiomyocytes protects the heart from myocardial infarction-induced injury. | |||
| neonatal rat CMs | miR-17-92 is sufficient to induce neonatal cardiomyocyte proliferation. | |||
| direct injection of miR-19a/19b mimics into the heart of a mouse model of MI | miR-19a/19b overexpression enhances cardiomyocyte proliferation and stimulates cardiac regeneration in response to myocardial infarction (MI) injury. | |||
| miRNA-204 | neonatal and adult rat CMs | Overexpression of miRNA-204 promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation | (Liang et al. | |
| cardiac-specific overexpression miRNA-204 transgenic mice | Overexpression of miRNA-204 promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation throughout the embryonic and adult stages. | |||
| miR302–367 cluster | cardiac-specific overexpression miR302–367 transgenic mice | Overexpression of miR302–367 promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation in embryonic and postnatal hearts, and miR302–367 promotes adult cardiac regeneration after myocardial infarction. | Hippo pathway | (Tian et al. |
| delivery miR302–367 mimics into the adult mice | Overexpression of miR302–367 promotes cardiac regeneration and improves function after injury. | |||
| miR-210 | neonatal rat CMs | miR-210 induces proliferation. | (Arif et al. | |
| miR-210 overexpressing transgenic (210-TG) mice | miR-210 overexpression promotes CM proliferation in adult mice post-ischemic injury. | |||
| miR-708 | H9C2 cells, neonatal rat CMs, neonatal mouse CMs | Overexpression of miR-708 promotes myocardium regeneration and heart function recovery. | (Deng et al. | |
| delivery miR-708 mimics to a mice model of cardiac hypertrophy | ||||
| miR-1825 | adult CMs | Overexpression of miR-1825 induces robust proliferation. | Hippo pathway | (Pandey et al. |
| direct injection of AAV-miR-1825 into mice | Overexpression of miR-1825 improves heart function. | |||
| miR-31a-5p | neonatal rat CMs | Overexpression of miR-31a-5p promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation. | (Xiao et al. | |
| neonatal rats were injected intraperitoneally with the miR-31a-5p antagomir | Inhibition of miR-31a-5p decreases cardiomyocyte proliferation. | |||
| miR-294 | neonatal and adult rat CMs | Overexpression of miR-294 promotes cell cycle activity. | (Borden et al. | |
| delivery of AAV-9-miR-294 to mice after MI | Overexpression of miR-294 promotes cell cycle reentry and improves cardiac function. | |||
| miR-152 | neonatal CMs | Overexpression of miR-152 promotes neonatal cardiomyocyte proliferation. | (Wang et al. | |
| miR-25 | neonatal and adult CMs | Inhibition of miR-25 reduces neonatal and adult cardiomyocyte proliferation. | (Qin et al. | |
| hESC-CM | miR-25 promotes hESC-CM proliferation. | |||
| Transgenic zebrafish | Overexpressing miR-25 promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation in zebrafish. |
Fig. 2Summary of miRNAs regulating heart regeneration. Different miRNAs and their targets stimulating (red area) or inhibiting (green area) cardiomyocyte proliferation and heart regeneration were shown. miRNAs are grouped according to the amount of evidence supporting their function: (1) miRNAs with evidence regulating heart regeneration in vivo (MI model) and cardiomyocyte proliferation in vitro; (2) miRNAs with evidence regulating cardiomyocyte proliferation both in vivo (without MI model) and in vitro; (3) miRNAs with only in vitro results of regulating cardiomyocyte proliferation. These three groups were indicated by different depth of red and green colors. MI: myocardial infarction