MicroRNA regulation postbleomycin due to the R213G extracellular superoxide dismutase variant is predicted to suppress inflammatory and immune pathways.
Denis OhlstromLaura Hernandez-LagunasAnastacia M GarciaAyed AllawziAnis Karimpour-FardCarmen C SucharovEva S NozikPublished in: Physiological genomics (2020)
Oxidative stress is a key contributor to the development of dysregulated inflammation in acute lung injury (ALI). A naturally occurring single nucleotide polymorphism in the key extracellular antioxidant enzyme, extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD), results in an arginine to glycine substitution (R213G) that promotes resolution of inflammation and protection against bleomycin-induced ALI. Previously we found that mice harboring the R213G mutation in EC-SOD exhibit a transcriptomic profile consistent with a striking suppression of inflammatory and immune pathways 7 days postbleomycin. However, the alterations in noncoding regulatory RNAs in wild-type (WT) and R213G EC-SOD lungs have not been examined. Therefore, we used next-generation microRNA (miR) Sequencing of lung tissue to identify dysregulated miRs 7 days after bleomycin in WT and R213G mice. Differential expression analysis identified 92 WT and 235 R213G miRs uniquely dysregulated in their respective genotypes. Subsequent pathway analysis identified that these miRs were predicted to regulate approximately half of the differentially expressed genes previously identified. The gene targets of these altered miRs indicate suppression of immune and inflammatory pathways in the R213G mice versus activation of these pathways in WT mice. Triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 1 (TREM1) signaling was identified as the inflammatory pathway with the most striking difference between WT and R213G lungs. miR-486b-3p was identified as the most dysregulated miR predicted to regulate the TREM1 pathway. We validated the increase in TREM1 signaling using miR-486b-3p antagomir transfection. These findings indicate that differential miR regulation is predicted to regulate the inflammatory gene profile, contributing to the protection against ALI in R213G mice.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- wild type
- induced apoptosis
- high fat diet induced
- diabetic rats
- cell proliferation
- long non coding rna
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- dna damage
- genome wide identification
- type diabetes
- genome wide
- nitric oxide
- insulin resistance
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- skeletal muscle
- inflammatory response
- copy number
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- immune response
- signaling pathway
- adipose tissue
- acute myeloid leukemia
- anti inflammatory