Linking lncRNAs to regulation, pathogenesis, and diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension.
Yan ZhangMianmian WuYunshan CaoFang GuoYahong LiPublished in: Critical reviews in clinical laboratory sciences (2019)
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a syndrome characterized by a persistent increase in pulmonary vascular resistance. Due to the lack of specificity in clinical manifestations, patients are usually diagnosed at the late stage of PH, which is hard to treat and often causes right heart failure and death. Furthermore, the regulation and pathogenesis of PH remain obscure. Recently, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), a type of transcript longer than 200 nt that lacks protein-coding ability, have been found to substantially influence the incidence and progression of various diseases through regulating gene expression at the chromatin, transcriptional, post-transcriptional, translational, and even post-translational levels. The crucial roles of lncRNAs in PH have started to draw widespread attention. This review summarizes the regulatory, pathogenic, and diagnostic roles of lncRNAs in PH, in the hope to facilitate the search for early diagnostic markers of and effective therapeutic targets for this devastating disease.
Keyphrases
- pulmonary hypertension
- gene expression
- heart failure
- transcription factor
- pulmonary artery
- network analysis
- ejection fraction
- end stage renal disease
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- genome wide identification
- newly diagnosed
- dna methylation
- genome wide analysis
- working memory
- risk factors
- rna seq
- coronary artery
- case report
- amino acid
- patient reported outcomes