Insight into microRNAs-Mediated Communication between Liver and Brain: A Possible Approach for Understanding Acute Liver Failure?
Karolina Orzeł-GajowikKrzysztof MilewskiMagdalena ZielińskaPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
Acute liver failure (ALF) is a life-threatening consequence of hepatic function rapid loss without preexisting liver disease. ALF may result in a spectrum of neuropsychiatric symptoms that encompasses cognitive impairment, coma, and often death, collectively defined as acute hepatic encephalopathy. Micro RNAs are small non-coding RNAs that modulate gene expression and are extensively verified as biomarker candidates in various diseases. Our systematic literature review based on the last decade's reports involving a total of 852 ALF patients, determined 205 altered circulating miRNAs, of which 25 miRNAs were altered in the blood, regardless of study design and methodology. Selected 25 miRNAs, emerging predominantly from the analyses of samples obtained from acetaminophen overdosed patients, represent the most promising biomarker candidates for a diagnostic panel for symptomatic ALF. We discussed the role of selected miRNAs in the context of tissue-specific origin and its possible regulatory role for molecular pathways involved in blood-brain barrier function. The defined several common pathways for 15 differently altered miRNAs were relevant to cellular community processes, indicating loss of intercellular, structural, and functional components, which may result in blood-brain barrier impairment and brain dysfunction. However, a causational relationship between circulating miRNAs differential expression, and particular clinical features of ALF, has to be demonstrated in a further study.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- hepatitis b virus
- blood brain barrier
- gene expression
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- cerebral ischemia
- cognitive impairment
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- white matter
- mental health
- drug induced
- patient reported outcomes
- emergency department
- multidrug resistant
- liver injury
- transcription factor
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- depressive symptoms
- quantum dots