| Literature DB >> 34564316 |
Tobias Plowman1,2, Dimitris Lagos1,2.
Abstract
The highly infectious severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged as the causative agent of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in late 2019, igniting an unprecedented pandemic. A mechanistic picture characterising the acute immunopathological disease in severe COVID-19 is developing. Non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) constitute the transcribed but un-translated portion of the genome and, until recent decades, have been undiscovered or overlooked. A growing body of research continues to demonstrate their interconnected involvement in the immune response to SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 development by regulating several of its pathological hallmarks: cytokine storm syndrome, haemostatic alterations, immune cell recruitment, and vascular dysregulation. There is also keen interest in exploring the possibility of host-virus RNA-RNA and RNA-RBP interactions. Here, we discuss and evaluate evidence demonstrating the involvement of short and long ncRNAs in COVID-19 and use this information to propose hypotheses for future mechanistic and clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; RNA–RNA interactions; cytokine storm syndrome; haemostasis; inflammation; lncRNA; microRNA; non-coding RNA; vascular regulation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34564316 PMCID: PMC8482139 DOI: 10.3390/ncrna7030054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Noncoding RNA ISSN: 2311-553X
A summary of the published COVID-19 ncRNA profiling studies with relevant literature highlighted.
| Study | ncRNA of Interest | Effect on ncRNA from Infection | Context Investigated | Additional Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | miR-766-3p | Downregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-766-3p was also downregulated in arthritis patients where patients upregulated IL-6 [ ▪ miR-766-3p overexpression reduced IL-6 expression in a cell line-immune stimulation model [ |
| miR-1275 | Downregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ TNF-α and IL-6 treatment of adipocytes reduced miR-1275 expression. ▪ miR-1275 has NF-κB binding sites. | |
| miR-31-5p | Upregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-31 was overexpressed in keratinocytes from patients with psoriasis (inflammatory condition) [ ▪ miR-31 silencing also suppressed the ability of keratinocytes to recruit immune cells. ▪ miR-31 was found to inhibit STK40, an immunosuppressive protein. ▪ However, miR-31 is also associated with TNS1 downregulation, an enhancer of immune infiltration [ ▪ Additionally, miR-31 knockdown worsened inflammation in a mouse inflammatory bowel disease model [ | |
| [ | miR-146a-5p | Downregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-146a-5p was upregulated in patients that responded to tocilizumab treatment. Those who were unresponsive downregulated it [ ▪ miR-146a-5p was found to downregulate IL-6 expression [ ▪ miR-146a-5p was also found to downregulate IL-1β and IRAK1 expression [ |
| [ | PVT1 | Upregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ PVT1 promotes the CpG methylation of the miR-146a promoter, suppressing expression [ ▪ PVT1 was also upregulated in the synovial tissue of arthritis patients [ |
| [ | MALAT1 | Upregulated | SARS-CoV-2 infected NHBE cells (bronchial) |
▪ MALAT1 can enhance immune cell chemotaxis by recruiting p300, reducing IL-8 expression [ |
| [ | MALAT1 | Downregulated | Mild COVID-19 patients—monocytes and macrophages |
▪ MALAT1 expression is associated with macrophage differentiation into the inflammatory M1 subtype [ |
| MALAT1 | Upregulated | Mild COVID-19 patients–CD4+ T cells |
▪ MALAT1 loss activates CD4+ T cells, pushing the balance away from regulatory T differentiation, instead towards the Th1 and Th17 effector type [ ▪ MALAT1 mouse knockouts have more immune activation in infection [ | |
| MALAT1 | Downregulated | Severe COVID-19 patients—CD4+ T cells | ||
| NEAT1 | Downregulated | Mild COVID-19 patients—BAL cells |
▪ NEAT1 enhances the assembly and processing of inflammasomes in macrophages; thus, its expression is likely pro-inflammatory [ | |
| NEAT1 | Upregulated | Severe COVID-19 patients—BAL cells | ||
| [ | miR-26a-5p | Downregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-26a-5p downregulation correlated with IL-6 and ICAM-1 upregulation in the study patients [ ▪ miR-26a-5p overexpression improved lung disease in an LPS-induced infection mouse model, likely by reducing inflammatory cytokine expression [ ▪ However, miR-26a-5p is correlated with increased IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α expression in macrophages from diabetic mice [ |
| miR-29-3p | Downregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-29-3p downregulation is correlated with IL-4 and IL-8 upregulation in the study patients [ ▪ miR-29-3p acted as anti-inflammatory by reducing MAPK activation and NF-κB signalling after LPS stimulation in a rat model of sepsis [ ▪ However, miR-29-3p was thought to promote IL-8 and other cytokine expression in a mouse respiratory disease model [ | |
| [ | miR-103a | Downregulated | Higher D-dimer COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-103a was downregulated in another study of patients with thromboembolic events [ ▪ miR-103a promotes M2 polarization, an immunosuppressive macrophage subtype [ |
| miR-145 | Downregulated | Higher D-dimer COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-145′s predicted target is the tissue factor (TF) [ ▪ Restoring miR-145 in a thrombotic animal model decreased TF and reduced thrombogenesis [ ▪ miR-145 was also reduced in patients with thromboembolic events and was negatively correlated with TF levels [ | |
| miR-885 | Downregulated | Higher D-dimer COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-885′s predicted target is the von Willebrand Factor (vWF) [ ▪ ADAMTS13/vWF is correlated with thromboembolic incidence in COVID-19, and higher vWF is correlated with high D-dimer levels [ | |
| miR-424 | Upregulated | Higher D-dimer COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-424 was also upregulated in two other studies of thromboembolic patients [ ▪ miR-424 may promote monocyte differentiation [ | |
| [ | miR-21 | Upregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ A mouse model of cardiac hypertrophy exhibited a four-fold increase in miR-21 [ ▪ Antisense miR-21 depletion in cultured heart cells improved their hypertrophic state [ ▪ miR-21 potentiated ERK–MAPK activity by inhibiting sprout homologue 1, inducing cardiac fibrosis and dysfunction [ ▪ However, miR-21 overexpression improved fibrosis and symptoms in mice with cardiac infarctions [ |
| miR-155 | Upregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-155 activates NF-κB signaling by activating IKK and PI3K/Akt [ | |
| miR-208a | Upregulated | COVID-19 patients |
▪ miR-208a is cardiac-specific [ ▪ miR-208 knockout mice did not develop fibrosis or hypertrophy in a heart disease model [ |
Figure 1NF-κB amplification of the immune-activating signal is an integration of ncRNA regulation. (a) A negative feedback loop of immunosuppressive ncRNA regulatory balance: NF-κB signaling induces the transcription of miR-146a-5p, which inhibits IRAK1, a positive regulator of NF-κB-promoted genes. The result is the downregulation of inflammatory gene expression, such as IL-6, IL-1β, and IRAK1. The lincRNA PVT1 is associated with promoter CpG methylation and thus the downregulation of miR-146a-5p expression, blocking its immunosuppressive expression; (b) a positive feedback loop of inflammatory ncRNA regulatory balance: NF-κB signaling induces the transcription of miR-155-5p, which further amplifies NF-κB signaling via IKK and PI3K/Akt, leading to the production of the inflammatory molecules IL-6, IL-1β, and IRAK1. Dexamethasone treatment can block miR-155-5p transcription by inhibiting NF-κB signalling.