| Literature DB >> 34408748 |
Mingxuan Chi1, Kuai Ma2, Yunlong Li1, Min Quan1, Zhongyu Han1, Zhaolun Ding3, Xin Liang1, Qinxiu Zhang1, Linjiang Song1, Chi Liu1,4.
Abstract
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an archetype autoimmune disease characterized by a myriad of immunoregulatory abnormalities that drives injury to multiple tissues and organs. Due to the involvement of various immune cells, inflammatory cytokines, and related signaling pathways, researchers have spent a great deal of effort to clarify the complex etiology and pathogenesis of SLE. Nevertheless, current understanding of the pathogenesis of SLE is still in the early stages, and available nonspecific treatment options for SLE patients remain unsatisfactory. First discovered in 1993, microRNAs (miRNAs) are small RNA molecules that control the expression of 1/3 of human genes at the post-transcriptional level and play various roles in gene regulation. The aberrant expression of miRNAs in SLE patients has been intensively studied, and further studies have suggested that these miRNAs may be potentially relevant to abnormal immune responses and disease progression in SLE. The aim of this review was to summarize the specific miRNAs that have been observed aberrantly expressed in several important pathogenetic processes in SLE, such as DCs abnormalities, overactivation and autoantibody production of B cells, aberrant activation of CD4+ T cells, breakdown of immune tolerance, and abnormally increased production of inflammatory cytokines. Our summary highlights a novel perspective on the intricate regulatory network of SLE, which helps to enrich our understanding of this disorder and ignite future interest in evaluating the molecular regulation of miRNAs in autoimmunity SLE.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; autoimmune disease; epigenetics; microRNAs; systemic lupus erythematosus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34408748 PMCID: PMC8365877 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.699684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1A schematic of miRNA biogenesis. miRNA biogenesis begins in the nucleus, where genes are mainly transcribed by RNA polymerase II into pri-miRNAs. Pri-miRNAs are processed into pre-miRNA by the RNase III enzyme, Dorsha and DGCR8. After being transported into cytoplasm by Exportin-5/Ran-GTP, pre-miRNAs are further processed by Dicer and TRBP to yield miRNAs duplex. An functional miRNA strand is unwound from the miRNAs duplex and then loaded into the RISC to form an miRISC assembly, which are the functional forms of miRNAs and the regulator of gene expression in posttranscriptional level by interacting with the target mRNA.
Figure 2(A) MiRNAs in dysfunctional antigen presentation by DCs. In the DC-specific absence of Blimp1, an increase in let-7 miRNA results in a broad spectrum of proinflammatory DC phenotype, mediated in part through suppression of SOCS1 expression. The CD40 expression was significantly upregulated with a negative correlation to the miR-155 in SLE primary target SHIP-1 expression. MiRNA-150 inhibited the expression of TREM-1 which amplify the function of TLR4. (B) miRNAs in aberrant activation of CD4+ T cells. MiR-21 contributed to the aberrant phenotype of T cells through interaction with PDCD4 or indirectly inhibiting DNMT1 expression through targeting RASGRP1. miRNAs such as miR-126, miR-29b and miR-148a can directly inhibit DNMT1 expression by targeting the protein coding region. These processes result in the overexpression of autoimmune-associated methylation-sensitive genes, which contribute to the autoreactivity and overstimulation of CD4+ T cells in SLE. miR-142-3p specifically targets the SLAM family, while miR-142-5p targets the 3’-UTR of SAP. Thus, decreased miR-142-3p/5p expression contributes to the up-regulation of CD84 and IL-10/SAP, resulting in the increased T cell function and IgG production in co-cultured B cells. Aberrant expression of miR-145 and miR-224 can promote T cell activation-induced cellular apoptosis and SLE-associated nephritis by overexpression of STAT1 and underexpression of API5. (C) miRNAs in functional inhibitory of Treg cells. The release of IL-6 or TNF-α can increase the expression levels of miR-34a, which can attenuate Foxp3 expression by targeting its 3ʹ-UTR. MiR-142-5p positively regulates intracellular levels of cAMP to maintain the suppressive function of Treg cells. MiR-142-3p can restrict cAMP levels in CD4+ T cells, which compromises the inhibitory function of Treg cells. MiR-99a and miR150 could regulate the function of Treg cells by targeting mTOR.
Figure 3Molecular mechanisms by which miRNAs promote B cell hyperactivity in SLE patients. These aberrant expressed miRNAs promote B cells abnormal activation and autoantibodies production in SLE by affecting important protein molecules in the B cell signaling pathway. MiR-15a interacts the Bcl-2 gene directly, which leads to the decrease of Bcl-2 and activation of intrinsic apoptotic pathway of regulatory B-10 cells. MiR-7 mediates the suppression of PTEN/AKT signaling, and then promotes B cell differentiation into plasma cells and spontaneous germinal center formation. Decreasing miR-155 in B cells contributes to the SHIP-1 reduction, which leads to the production of serum IgG anti-dsDNA antibodies. MiR-155 also suppresses PU.1 and TNF-α, and then inhibits BAFF and CD19 protein expression, and promotes the B cell proliferation and antibody production in SLE. MiR-30a increases in B cells of SLE patients and directly decreases the expression of Lyn, an important mediator of B cell activation, via targeting with the 3’-UTR of Lyn mRNA. MOMP, Mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization; BAX/BAK, Bcl-2-associated X protein/Bcl-2 homologous antagonist killer.
The roles of miRNAs in the pathogenesis of SLE.
| Events | miRNA | Levels | Mechanism | Biological function | Experimental subject | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCs | let-7c | ↑ | suppresses SOCS1 expression | contributes to a broad spectrum of proinflammatory DC phenotype | DCBlimp1ko mice | ( |
| miR-155 | ↑ | enhances TLR7-induced CD40 expression | contributes to the hyperactivated TLR7 response in lupus pDCs | Lupus-Prone NZB/W F1 mice | ( | |
| miR-150 | ↓ | inhibits the expression of TREM-1 | enhances the inflammation responses in splenic cDCs in lupus prone mice | MRLlpr/lpr mice and C57BL/6 wild type mice | ( | |
| B cell | miR-1246 | ↓ | reduces the inhibitory effect on the expression of EBF1 and activates AKT signaling pathway | contributes to the development, activation, and proliferation of B cells | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( |
| miR-15a | ↑ | targets important genes involving cell cycle (e.g. cyclin D1) or cell apoptosis (e.g. Bcl-2) | disrupts the balance between regulatory B cells (B-10) and the pathogenic B cells (B-2) and increases the anti-dsDNA autoantibody levels | SLE mouse model | ( | |
| miR-30a | ↑ | decreases the expression of Lyn such as CD19 and CD180 | regulates the B cell proliferation and antibody production | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| hsa-miR-345 | ↑ | inhibits IRF8 | regulates the differentiation of B cells | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| hsa-miR-224 | ↑ | contributes to IRF4 overexpression and increass production of IL-21 | B cell hyperresponsiveness | |||
| hsa-miR-10a | ↑ | inhibits IL-8 during the inactive phase | blocks the generation of autoreactive antibodies by B lymphocytes | |||
| miR-155 | ↑ | contributes to the reduction of SHIP-1 expression partly | increases serum IgG anti-dsDNA antibodies and kidney inflammation | Faslpr lupus-prone mice and their PBMCs | ( | |
| increases the expression of PU.1 and TNF-α, which in turn promotes BAFF and CD19 protein expression | disrupts peripheral tolerance in B cells and thereby induces autoantibody production increase the SLEDAI-2K | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |||
| miR-152-3p | ↑ | increases the BAFF expression by targeting and decreases the expression of KLF5 | causes B-cell self-reactivity and autoantibody production | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-7 | ↑ | negatively regulates the PTEN expression and down-regulates activation of PI3K/AKT signaling | promotes B cell differentiation into plasmablasts/plasma cells and spontaneous germinal center (GC) formation | MRL lpr/lpr lupus mice and their PBMCs | ( | |
| T cell | miR-21 | ↑ | targets RASGRP1 to diminish Ras-MAPK pathway signaling and inhibit DNMT1 expression | contributes to DNA hypomethylation and T cell hyperactivity | SLE patients, lupus-prone MRL/lpr mice and healthy human PBMCs | ( |
| decreases expression level of PDCD4 to regulate IL-10 and CD40L | contributes to aberrant T cell phenotype | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ||||
| miR-148a | ↑ | targets DNMT1 to regulate CD70 and LFA-1 | contributes to DNA hypomethylation and T cell hyperactivity | SLE patients, lupus-prone MRL/lpr mice and healthy human PBMCs | ( | |
| miR-126 | ↑ | targets DNMT1 to induce demethylation and up-regulate CD70 and CD11a | contributes to DNA hypomethylation and T cell hyperactivity | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-29b | ↑ | targets Sp1 to negatively regulate DNMT1 and increases the expression of CD70 and CD11a gene | contributes to DNA hypomethylation and T cell hyperactivity | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-145 | ↓ | targets STAT-1 mRNA and ehances its expression level | associates with lupus nephritis significantly | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-224 | ↑ | targets API5 mRNA and decreases its expression level | accelerates T cell activation-induced cell death in Jurkat cells | |||
| miR-142-5p | ↓ | targets SLAM associated protein (SAP) | T cell activation and B cell hyperresponsiveness | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-142-3p | ↓ | targets SLAM family (IL-10 and CD84) | T cell activation and B cell hyperresponsiveness | |||
| immune tolerance | miR-21 | ↑ | regulates FOXP3 expression positively | negatively regulates Treg cell development | umbilical cord blood mononuclear cells (UCBMC) | ( |
| miR-142-3p | ↑ | reduces the level of intracellular cAMP by inhibiting AC9 production | limits the suppressor function of Treg cells | splenocytes from naive BALB/c mice | ( | |
| miR-31 | ↑ | targets Gprc5a, Ppp6C and Foxp3 | negatively regulates Treg cell generation and differentiation | PBMCs from murine and SLE patient | ( | |
| miR-17 | ↓ | targets TGFβRII and CREB1 | inhibits iTreg differentiation and facilitates effector T-cell responses | mice and PBMCs from SLE patients | ( | |
| miR-142-5p | ↓ | enhances Pde3b transcription and reduces the level of intracellular cAMP | key determinant of Treg function and peripheral immune tolerance | spleen and peripheral lymph nodes cells from mice | ( | |
| miR-34a | ↑ | targets and attenuates the expression of Foxp3 gene | inhibits Treg cell differentiation and disrupts Treg/Th17 balance | PBMCs from murine and SLE patient | ( | |
| miR-125a | ↓ | insufficiently targets and increases the expression of STAT3, Ifng, Il13 | labilizes the immunoregulatory capacity of Treg cells | mice, SLE patient and their PBMCs | ( | |
| miR-15a | ↑ | activating the apoptotic pathway of the B-10 subset | weaken suppress effects of B-10 cells on SLE and other inflammatory diseases | Female (NZB × NZW)F1 or B/W mice | ( | |
| miR-155 | ↑ | inhibiting CD1d expression in B cells | impair the tolerance of NKT cells | Female C57BL/6J and MRL/lpr lupus-prone mice | ( | |
| inflammatory chemokine | miR-146a | ↓ | impairs negative regulation of multiple components expression in the type I IFN pathway, including IRAK1, TRAF6, IRF-5 and STAT-1 | directly activates downstream of type I IFN | C57BL/6 mice, HEK293 cells | ( |
| miR-125a | ↓ | increases KLF13 gene expression and hence RANTES expression | regulates inflammatory chemokines production and contribute to organ inflammation | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-181b | ↓ | directly regulates AID and IFN-α mRNAs | impairs negative regulation to IFN-α | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-410 | ↓ | impairs negative regulation to transcription activity of STAT3 | increases the expression levels of IL-10 | PBLs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-302d | ↓ | increases IRF9 gene expression and enhances ISG expression | negatively correlates with IFN score | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-31 | ↑ | targets serine/threonine kinase 40 | promotes NF-κB signaling to enhance inflammatory cytokine production. | PBMCs and splenocytes in MRL/lpr mice | ( | |
| miR-98 | ↓ | impairs targeting gene IL-6 | promotes STAT3-mediated cell proliferation and inflammatory cytokine production | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( | |
| miR-654 | ↓ | inhibits MIF expression by binding to MIF mRNA | selectively suppresses the phosphorylation of ERK and AKT, reduces downstream inflammatory cytokine production | PBMCs from SLE patients and healthy controls | ( |
Figure 4The expression of miRNAs and their involvement in immunological dysfunction of SLE. The aberrant expression of miRNAs can be noticed in almost every vital process of SLE. The expression levels of anti-inflammatory miRNAs, such as miR-19b, miR-146a, miR-142-5p, miR-124b and miR-422a, decrease, while the expression levels of pro-inflammatory miRNAs, such as miR-146a, miR-224, miR-29b, miR-31 and miR-150, increase. Dysregulated miRNAs disturb the normal biological procedure of immune response by swaying the expression of pivotal protein molecule (e.g. CD40, CD40L, IFN, BAFF) directly or indirectly. These processes lead to autoimmune and tissue damage with aberrantly activated T lymphocytes, over-activated B cells, autoantibody accumulation and abnormally increased inflammatory cytokines in SLE. IC, immune complex; TCR, T cell receptor.
| SLE | Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| miRNAs | microRNAs |
| auto-Abs | autoantibodies |
| DCs | dendritic cells |
| TLR | Toll-like receptor |
| NF-κB | nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells |
| pri-miRNAs | primary RNA transcripts |
| RNase III enzyme | ribonuclease III enzyme |
| pre-miRNA | precursor miRNAs |
| RISC | RNA-induced silencing complex |
| mRNA | messenger RNA |
| 3’-UTR | 3’-untranslated region |
| mDC | myeloid DC |
| pDC | plasmacytoid DC |
| Blimp1 | B lymphocyte–induced maturation protein-1 |
| SOCS | suppressor of cytokine signaling |
| SHIP-1 | SH2 domain-containing inositol 5’-phosphatase 1 |
| JAK-STAT | Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription |
| PI3K | phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase |
| AKT | protein kinase B |
| BCR | B cell receptor |
| LYN | Lck/Yes novel tyrosine kinase |
| FcγRIIb | Fcγ receptor IIb |
| PTEN | phosphatase and tensin homolog |
| Bcl-2 | B cell lymphoma-2 |
| EBF1 | expression of Early B cell factor 1 |
| Tfh cells | follicular helper T cells |
| DNMTs | DNA methyltransferases |
| RASGRP1 | rasguanyl-nucleotide-releasingprotein1 |
| TNFSF | tumour necrosis factor superfamily |
| LAF-1 | lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 |
| SLAM | signaling lymphocytic activation molecule |
| IL-10 | interleukin 10 |
| SAP | SLAM associated protein |
| IgG | immunoglobulin G |
| STAT-1 | activator of transcription-1 |
| API5 | apoptosis inhibitory protein 5 |
| Foxp3 | forkhead box P3 |
| Teff cell | effector T cell |
| Treg cells | regulatory T cells |
| PBMCs | peripheral blood mononuclear cells |
| TNF α | tumour necrosis factor α |
| cAMP | cyclic adenosine monophosphate |
| Th cell | T helper cell |
| IFN-1 | type 1 interferon |
| MHC I | major histocompatibility complex I |
| CXCL | chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand |
| CXCR 3 | CXC chemokine receptors 3 |
| APCs | antigen-presenting cells |
| RANTES | regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted |