MiRNA Expression is Associated with Clinical Variables Related to Vascular Remodeling in the Kidney and the Brain in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Patients.
Ligia PetricaAgneta-Maria PusztaiMihaela Maria VladAdrian VladFlorica GadaleanVictor DumitrascuDaliborca VladSilvia VelciovCristina GluhovschiFlaviu BobSorin UrsoniuMaxim PetricaPetru MatuszOctavian CretuDaniela RaduOana MilasAlina SecaraAnca SimulescuRoxana PopescuDragos Catalin JianuPublished in: Endocrine research (2019)
Background: The association of vascular remodeling in the kidney and the brain with a particular microRNAs (miRNA) profile is not well studied.Methods: Seventy-six patients with Type 2 diabetes and 11 healthy subjects were assessed concerning urine albumin: creatinine ratio (UACR), biomarkers of podocyte injury and of proximal tubule (PT) dysfunction. MiRNA were quantified in blood and urine by a real-time PCR System. Cerebrovascular ultrasound measurements were performed in the carotid and middle cerebral arteries.Results: MiRNA21 and miRNA124 correlated positively with nephrin, podocalyxin, synaptopodin, urinary N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), urinary kidney-injury molecule-1 (KIM-1), UACR, and negatively with eGFR; miRNA125a, 126, 146a, 192 correlated negatively with nephrin, podocalyxin, synaptopodin, urinary NAG, urinary KIM-1, UACR, and directly with eGFR. Plasma miRNA-21 and miRNA192 correlated directly with cerebral hemodynamics parameters of atherosclerosis and arteriosclerosis. MiRNA-124, 125a, 126, 146a showed negative correlations with the same parameters.Conclusions: In Type 2 diabetes patients there is an association of vascular remodeling in the brain and the kidney with a specific miRNAs pattern. Cerebrovascular changes occur even in normoalbuminuric patients, with 'high-to-normal' levels of podocyte injury and PT dysfunction biomarkers. These phenomena may be explained by the variability of miRNA expression within the two organs in early DKD.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- end stage renal disease
- small cell lung cancer
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- poor prognosis
- cardiovascular disease
- magnetic resonance imaging
- resting state
- cerebral ischemia
- prognostic factors
- multiple sclerosis
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- diabetic nephropathy
- ultrasound guided
- glycemic control
- binding protein
- drug induced