| Literature DB >> 35206583 |
Poonam Kataria1, Neha Surela1, Amrendra Chaudhary1, Jyoti Das1,2.
Abstract
Malaria is a severe life-threatening disease caused by the bites of parasite-infected female Anopheles mosquitoes. It remains a significant problem for the most vulnerable children and women. Recent research has helped establish the relationship between microRNAs (miRNAs) and many other diseases. MiRNAs are the class of small non-coding RNAs consisting of 18-23 nucleotides in length that are evolutionarily conserved and regulate gene expression at a post-transcriptional level and play a significant role in various molecular mechanisms such as cell survival, cell proliferation, and differentiation. MiRNAs can help detect malaria infection as the malaria parasite could alter the miRNA expression of the host. These alterations can be diagnosed by the molecular diagnostic tool that can indicate disease. We summarize the current understanding of miRNA during malaria infection. miRNAs can also be used as biomarkers, and initial research has unearthed their potential in diagnosing and managing various diseases such as malaria.Entities:
Keywords: MicroRNAs; MicroRNAs biogenesis; biomarkers; extracellular vesicles; gene expression
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35206583 PMCID: PMC8874942 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19042395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Pathway of biogenesis of microRNAs (miRNAs). In the nucleus, the non-coding part is transcribed by RNA polymerase II to form a hairpin-like structure called pri-miRNA. Then, enzymes Drosha and DGCR8 complex cleaved the pri-miRNA into pre-miRNA. From the nucleus, the pre-miRNA is exported by exportin 5 into the cytoplasm, and the complex of enzyme Dicer and Trans-Activation Responsive RNA-Binding Protein (TRBP) cuts the hairpin-like structure and processes the pre-miRNA into two unstable mature miRNA arms into two strands, mature miRNA guide strand and the miRNA passenger strand. After strand separation, the guide strand (5′end) of the miRNA/miRNA duplex is complexed with RISC attached with Argonaute protein. The miRNA RISC complex facilitates base-pairing interaction between miRNA and mRNA, which leads to gene regulation.
Figure 2(A) About 200 miRNAs are found in human RBCs lacking nucleus and transcription/translation machinery. (B) Plasmodium-infected human red blood cells (RBCs). Transfer of miRNAs from RBC to Plasmodium parasite and inhibit translation. (C) Transfer of miRNAs from Plasmodium-infected RBC to endothelial cells. (Reproduced from Bayer-Santos, E.; Marini, M. M.; da Silveira, J. F., Non-coding RNAs in host–pathogen interactions: subversion of mammalian cell functions by protozoan parasites. Frontiers in microbiology 2017, used under CC BY 4.0 with modification and addition of Normal RBCs, Microvesicles, Exosomes and Host derived EVs [30]).
List of miRNAs studies conducted on humans and animal model experiments to explore various miRNA regulations and their functions.
| S. No | Study/Author | Year | MiRNA | Regulation | Functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Ketprasit et al. [ | 2020 | MiR-150-5p andMiR-15b-5p | Upregulated level of extracellular derived miRNA in | Adherens junction and TGF-beta signalling pathway. |
| let-7a-5p | Upregulated in both | Adherens junction | |||
| 2. | Aarón Martin-Alonso et al. [ | 2018 | miR-19a-3p, miR-27a-5p, and miR-142-3p | It is upregulated in CM infected mice’s brains compared to NI and NCM. | Play a significant role in several pathways relevant to CM, including the TGF-β and endocytosis pathways. |
| 3. | Cohen et al. [ | 2018 | miR-146a and miR-193b | Upregulated in microvesicles from cerebral malaria-infected mice | Cerebral pathology |
| 4. | Chamnanchanunt et al. [ | 2015 | MiR-145 and miR-16 | Down-regulated in serum of | Not defined |
| miR-223, miR-226-3p | No change | Not defined | |||
| 5. | LaMonte et al. [ | 2012 | MiRNA-145, MiRNA-223 and let-7i | It is upregulated in HbAS and HbSS erythrocytes of | Integrated into parasite mRNAs and resulted in translational inhibition. |
| 6. | El-Assaad et al. [ | 2011 | MiR-27a, miR-150 | Upregulated in the brain tissue of PbA infected mice | Cell proliferation, development, and differentiation. |
| let-7i | Upregulated in the brain tissue of PbA infected mice | Cellular proliferation and the innate immune response | |||
| 7. | Rathjen et al. [ | 2006 | MiR-145 | Upregulated in both infected and healthy red blood cells | Differentiation of erythroid cells. |
List of various miRNAs altered during non-infectious, viral, bacterial, protozoan diseases.
| S. No. | Disease | Type of Disease | Effect on MiRNAs | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia | Non-infectious | Altered miRNA expression pattern in patients who have chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. | Calin et al., 2002 [ |
| 2. | Colorectal Neoplasia | Non-infectious | Murine miRNAs (miR-143 and miR-145) showed reduced steady-state concentrations at different cancer stages of colorectal neoplasia. | Michael et al., 2003 [ |
| 3. | Human cancers | Non-infectious | Downregulation of miRNAs in tumours compared with normal tissues was observed. The potential of miRNA profiling in cancer diagnosis was highlighted. | Lu et al., 2005 [ |
| 4. | Sepsis | Viral infection | miR-15a, miR-122, miR-4661, miR-483-5p, miR-342-5p miR-297, miR-181b, and miR-193 were, while miR-486, miR182, miR-4772, miR-574-5p, and miR-133a were found to be upregulated. | Ojha R et al., 2019 [ |
| 5. | Human Immunodeficiency Virus | Viral infection | miR-33a-5p, hsa-miR-223, hsa-miR-146a-5p, and miR-29b-3p were downregulated in the infected individuals. | Houzet et al., 2008 [ |
| 6. | Hepatitis | Viral infection | MiR-34, miR-4485, miR-92b-5p, miR-200b-5p, miR-29b and miR-192b-5p were upregulated, whereas miR-125, miR-330-3p, miR-1468, and miR-3180 were downregulated in infected individuals. | Xu et al., 2011 [ |
| 7. | Tuberculosis | Bacterial infection | miR-889, miR-576-3p and miR-361-5p were elevated in tuberculosis-infected serum | Qi et al., 2012 [ |
| 8. | Helicobacter pylori | Bacterial infection | The level of miR-17-p, miR-106a, miR-21, andmiR-106b were upregulated, and the expression of let-7a was downregulated. | W. K. K. Wu et al., 2010 [ |
| 9. | Malaria | Protozoan infection | miRNA-16, miRNA-106, miRNA-91, MiRNA-451, miRNA-144, miRNA-7b, miRNA-142, miRNA-92 let-7a, and let-7f, were downregulated, whereas miRNA-19b and miRNA-223 were upregulated in the RBCs. | LaMonte et al., 2012 [ |
| 10. | Trypanosomiasis | Protozoan infection | the expression level of miR-338 and miR-193b remarkably increased in patients affected with trypanosomiasis, whereas the expression of miR144 decreases at the time of infection | J. Wang, He, et al., 2012; Liu et al., 2011 [ |