| Literature DB >> 34783627 |
Haixia Wang1, Hongbin Mou2, Xiaolan Xu1, Changhua Liu2, Gang Zhou2, Bo Gao2.
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI), a common complication of sepsis, is characterized by a rapid loss of renal excretory function. A variety of etiologies and pathophysiological processes may contribute to AKI. Previously, mitogen-activated protein kinase 1 (MAPK1) was reported to regulate cellular processes in various sepsis-associated diseases. The current study aimed to further explore the biological function and regulatory mechanism of MAPK1 in sepsis-induced AKI. In our study, MAPK1 exhibited high expression in the serum of AKI patients. Functionally, knockdown of MAPK1 suppressed inflammatory response, cell apoptosis in response of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induction in HK-2 cells. Moreover, MAPK1 deficiency alleviated renal inflammation, renal dysfunction, and renal injury in vivo. Mechanistically, MAPK1 could activate the downstream p38/NF-κB pathway. Moreover, long noncoding RNA potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily Q member 1 opposite strand/antisense transcript 1 (KCNQ1OT1) was identified to serve as a competing endogenous RNA for miR-212-3p to regulate MAPK1. Finally, rescue assays indicated that the inhibitory effect of KCNQ1OT1 knockdown on inflammatory response, cell apoptosis, and p38/NF-κB pathway was reversed by MAPK1 overexpression in HK-2 cells. In conclusion, KCNQ1OT1 aggravates acute kidney injury by activating p38/NF-κB pathway via miR-212-3p/MAPK1 axis in sepsis. Therefore, KCNQ1OT may serve as a potential biomarker for the prognosis and diagnosis of AKI patients.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; KCNQ1OT; MAPK1; ceRNA; p38/nf-κB
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34783627 PMCID: PMC8810185 DOI: 10.1080/21655979.2021.2005987
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineered ISSN: 2165-5979 Impact factor: 3.269
Sequences of plasmids used for cell transfection
| Name | Sequence (5ʹ→3ʹ) |
| sh-MAPK1 | GGACCTCATGGAAACAGATCTTTCAAGAGAAGATCTGTTTCCATGAGGTCCTTTTTT |
| sh-NC | AGATGACACTATAGGTCCGACTTCAAGAGAGTCGGACCTATAGTGTCATCTTTTTTT |
| sh-KCNQ1OT1 | GGTGTTACGACTTGTTGTATTCAAGAGATACAACAAGTCGTAACACC TTTTTT |
| sh-NC | GATGTGATCATTCTGGTGTTTCAAGAGAACACCAGAATGATCACATCTTTTTT |
| miR-212-3p mimics | UAACAGUCUCCAGUCACGGCC |
| NC mimics | CGCCACCUAAGUAGUGCACCU |
| miR-212-3p inhibitor | GGCCGUGACUGGAGACUGUUA |
| NC inhibitor | AGGUGCACUACUUAGGUGGCG |
Figure 1.MAPK1 knockdown suppresses inflammatory response in LPS-induced HK-2 cells
Figure 2.Silencing MAPK1 inhibits HK-2 cell apoptosis and inactivates p38/NF-κB pathway
Figure 3.MAPK1 depletion alleviates sepsis-induced kidney injury in vivo.
Figure 4.MiR-212-3p directly targets MAPK1
Figure 5.KCNQ1OT1 directly interacts with miR-212-3p
Figure 6.KCNQ1OT1 promotes inflammatory response in LPS-treated HK-2 cells via upregulation of MAPK1
Figure 7.KCNQ1OT1 promotes HK-2 cell apoptosis and activates p38/NF-κB pathway in LPS-treated HK-2 cells via upregulation of MAPK1