| Literature DB >> 34931322 |
Jinju Wang1, Kartheek Pothana2, Shuzhen Chen1, Harshal Sawant1, Jeffrey B Travers2,3, Ji Bihl1, Yanfang Chen2.
Abstract
Ultraviolet B (UVB) stimulates the generation of extracellular vesicles, which elicit systemic effects. Here, we studied whether UVB affects the release and microRNA (miR) content of keratinocyte exosomes (EXs) in diabetic conditions. In vitro, we examined the UVB effects on affecting EX release from keratinocyte HaCaT cells (HaCaT-EX) pretreated with high glucose. HaCaT-EX functions were evaluated on Schwann cells (SCs). In vivo, UVB-induced miR change in skin EXs of diabetic db/db mice was analyzed. The miRs of interest were validated in HaCaT-EXs. We found that: (1) UVB promoted HaCaT-EX generation in dose- and time-dependent manners; 100 and 1800 J m-2 of UVB had the most prominent effect and were selected as effective low- and high-fluence UVB in vitro. (2) A total of 13 miRs were differentially expressed >3-fold in skin EXs in UVB-treated db/db mice; miR-126 was the most up-regulated by low-fluence UVB. (3) Functional studies revealed that the SC viability was improved by low-fluence UVB HaCaT-EXs, while worsened by high-fluence UVB HaCaT-EXs. (4) MiR-126 inhibitor attenuated the effects induced by low-fluence UVB HaCaT-EXs. Our data have demonstrated that low- and high-fluence UVBs promote HaCaT-EX generation but differentially affect exosomal miR levels and functions under diabetic conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34931322 PMCID: PMC9511213 DOI: 10.1111/php.13583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Photochem Photobiol ISSN: 0031-8655 Impact factor: 3.521
Primer sequence for miRs used for qRT‐PCR.
| hsa‐miR‐23a |
| RT primer: 5′‐GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACAATCCC ‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ AAATTTGGGGTTCCTGGGGATGG ‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐29a |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACCTGAAC ‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GGGCGCACTGATTTCTTTTGGTG‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐31 |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACAGCTAT ‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GCGATTAGGCAAGATGCTGGCAT‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐125a |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACTCACAG‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GGCCACTCCCTGAGACCCTTTAA‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐126a‐5p |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACCGCGTA‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GCGGGGCATTATTACTTTTGGTA ‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐146a |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACAACCCA‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GGGCCCTGAGAACTGAATTCCAT‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐155 |
| RT primer: 5′‐GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACACC CCT‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GGGGGGGCTTAATGCTAATTGTGAT ‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐181a |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACACTCAC‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ CGCGGTAACATTCAACGCTGTCG‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐196a |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACCCCAAC‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GCGCGCTAGGTAGTTTCATGTTG‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐199a |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACGAACAG‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GGCAACCCCAGTGTTCAGACTAC‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐221 |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACAAATCT‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ GGAGCCACCTGGCATACAATGTA‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐222 |
| RT primer: 5′‐GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACAGGATC‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ AACCGCCTCAGTAGCCAGTGTAG‐3′ |
| hsa‐miR‐411 |
| RT primer: 5′‐ GTCGTATCCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTATTCGCACTGGATACGACCGTACG ‐3′ |
| F primer: 5′‐ CCCGGGTAGTAGACCGTATAGCG ‐3′ |
| R primer for all miRs: 5′‐ CCAGTGCAGGGTCCGAGGTA ‐3′ |
| U6 F primer: 5′‐ CTCGCTTCGGCAGCACA ‐3′; R primer: 5′‐ AACGCTTCACGAATTTGCGT‐3′ |
Figure 1UVB irradiation promotes EX release from HaCaT cells in dose‐ and time‐dependent manners. The HaCaT cells were cultured in NC or HG condition and then exposed to different fluences of UVB. (A) Summarized data showing the concentration of EXs released from HaCaT cells stimulated by different fluences of UVB. *P < 0.05 vs NC at the same UVB irradiation; # P < 0.05 vs 200 or 500 in NC; + P < 0.05 vs 0 or 50 in HG; $ P < 0.05 vs 900 in NC; & P < 0.05 vs 900 or 3600 in HG. (B) The summarized data show the concentration of HaCaT‐EXs in different time points after UVB irradiation. *P < 0.05 vs NC at the same time point; # P < 0.05 vs 0 h at the same UVB fluence; + P < 0.05 vs 0 or 4 h at the same UVB fluence. Data are expressed as mean ± SD. N = 6/group.
Figure 2MiRNome analysis of miR expression profile in the skin EXs of db/db mice. (A) representative western blot bands of skin EXs expressing CD63 and cytokeratin 14. (B) summarized data showing the level of skin EXs in the two mouse groups. *P < 0.05 vs db/c at the same UVB fluence; + P < 0.05 vs db/db no‐UVB; # P < 0.05 vs db/db low‐fluence UVB. Data are expressed as mean ± SD. N = 4/group. (B) The representative miR profiling graph showing the changes of miRs in skin EXs from db/db mice received low‐ or high‐ fluence UVB. (C) Venn diagram shows the miR changes in the skin EXs. Green: up‐regulated miRs >3‐fold; Pink: down‐regulated miRs >3‐fold; Yellow: up‐ or down‐ regulated in both groups.
Figure 3QRT‐PCR analysis of miR expression in HaCaT‐EXs. (A–M) miR expression levels in NC and HG HaCaT‐EXs released in response to low‐ or high‐ fluence UVB. *P < 0.05 vs NC HaCaT‐EXs; + P < 0.05 vs HG HaCaT‐EXs or NC HaCaT‐EXs at the same UVB fluence. Data are expressed as mean ± SD. N = 4/group. NC HaCaT‐EXs: EXs generated from NC HaCaT cells; HG HaCaT‐EXs: EXs generated from HG‐treated HaCaT cells; 100 J m−2 UVB+NC HaCaT‐EXs: EXs generated from NC HaCaT cells exposed to 100 J m−2 UVB; 100 J m−2 UVB+HG HaCaT‐EXs: EXs generated from HaCaT cells treated with HG plus 100 J m−2 UVB; 1800 J m−2 UVB+NC HaCaT‐EXs: EXs generated from NC HaCaT cells treated with 1800 J m−2; 1800 J m−2 UVB+HG HaCaT‐EXs: EXs generated from HaCaT cells treated with HG plus 1800 J m−2 UVB.
Figure 4HaCaT‐EXs co‐culture altered the viability of Schwann cells. EXs were collected from the culture medium of HaCaT cells exposed to NC or HG plus low‐ or high‐ fluence UVB and used for co‐culture assay. The concentration of EXs was 2 × 109 EXs mL−1. Schwann cells were exposed to HG 48 h prior to the co‐culture. MTT assay was conducted at 24‐h co‐culture to evaluate the cellular viability of Schwann cells, and qRT‐PCR was applied to determine miR‐126 level in Schwann cells after EX co‐culture. (A) miR‐126 level in Schwann cells co‐cultured with different types of EXs. (B) Schwann cell viability in different co‐culture groups. *P < 0.05 vs control; + P < 0.05 vs HG only; # P < 0.05 vs 100 J m−2 UVB + NC HaCaT‐EXs or 100 J m−2 UVB + HG HaCaT‐EXs. Data are expressed as mean ± SD. N = 3/group.