miR-125a, miR-139 and miR-324 contribute to Urocortin protection against myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury.
Ignacio DíazEva Calderón-SánchezRaquel Del ToroJavier Ávila-MédinaEva Sánchez de Rojas-de PedroAlejandro Domínguez-RodríguezJuan Antonio RosadoAbdelkrim HmadchaAntonio OrdóñezTarik SmaniPublished in: Scientific reports (2017)
Urocortin 1 and 2 (Ucn-1 and Ucn-2) have established protective actions against myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injuries. However, little is known about their role in posttranscriptional regulation in the process of cardioprotection. Herein, we investigated whether microRNAs play a role in urocortin-induced cardioprotection. Administration of Ucn-1 and Ucn-2 at the beginning of reperfusion significantly restored cardiac function, as evidenced ex vivo in Langendorff-perfused rat hearts and in vivo in rat subjected to I/R. Experiments using microarray and qRT-PCR determined that the addition of Ucn-1 at reperfusion modulated the expression of several miRNAs with unknown role in cardiac protection. Ucn-1 enhanced the expression of miR-125a-3p, miR-324-3p; meanwhile it decreased miR-139-3p. Similarly, intravenous infusion of Ucn-2 in rat model of I/R mimicked the effect of Ucn-1 on miR-324-3p and miR-139-3p. The effect of Ucn-1 involves the activation of corticotropin-releasing factor receptor-2, Epac2 and ERK1/2. Moreover, the overexpression of miR-125a-3p, miR-324-3p and miR-139-3p promoted dysregulation of genes expression involved in cell death and apoptosis (BRCA1, BIM, STAT2), in cAMP and Ca2+ signaling (PDE4a, CASQ1), in cell stress (NFAT5, XBP1, MAP3K12) and in metabolism (CPT2, FoxO1, MTRF1, TAZ). Altogether, these data unveil a novel role of urocortin in myocardial protection, involving posttranscriptional regulation with miRNAs.
Keyphrases
- cell proliferation
- poor prognosis
- long non coding rna
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- left ventricular
- binding protein
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- signaling pathway
- acute myocardial infarction
- transcription factor
- cerebral ischemia
- acute ischemic stroke
- high dose
- single cell
- bone marrow
- endothelial cells
- stem cells
- drug induced
- gene expression
- inflammatory response
- acute coronary syndrome
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- bioinformatics analysis
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- protein kinase