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Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment

Anti-cancer therapy based on anthracyclines (DNA intercalating Topoisomerase II inhibitors) is limited by adverse effects of these compounds on the cardiovascular system, ultimately causing heart failure. Despite extensive investigations into the effects of doxorubicin on the cardiovascular system,...

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Autores principales: Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina, Bauer, Yasmina, Berridge, Brian R., Bongiovanni, Sandrine, Gerrish, Kevin, Hamadeh, Hisham K., Letzkus, Martin, Lyon, Jonathan, Moggs, Jonathan, Paules, Richard S., Pognan, François, Staedtler, Frank, Vidgeon-Hart, Martin P., Grenet, Olivier, Couttet, Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22859947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040395
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author Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina
Bauer, Yasmina
Berridge, Brian R.
Bongiovanni, Sandrine
Gerrish, Kevin
Hamadeh, Hisham K.
Letzkus, Martin
Lyon, Jonathan
Moggs, Jonathan
Paules, Richard S.
Pognan, François
Staedtler, Frank
Vidgeon-Hart, Martin P.
Grenet, Olivier
Couttet, Philippe
author_facet Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina
Bauer, Yasmina
Berridge, Brian R.
Bongiovanni, Sandrine
Gerrish, Kevin
Hamadeh, Hisham K.
Letzkus, Martin
Lyon, Jonathan
Moggs, Jonathan
Paules, Richard S.
Pognan, François
Staedtler, Frank
Vidgeon-Hart, Martin P.
Grenet, Olivier
Couttet, Philippe
author_sort Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina
collection PubMed
description Anti-cancer therapy based on anthracyclines (DNA intercalating Topoisomerase II inhibitors) is limited by adverse effects of these compounds on the cardiovascular system, ultimately causing heart failure. Despite extensive investigations into the effects of doxorubicin on the cardiovascular system, the molecular mechanisms of toxicity remain largely unknown. MicroRNAs are endogenously transcribed non-coding 22 nucleotide long RNAs that regulate gene expression by decreasing mRNA stability and translation and play key roles in cardiac physiology and pathologies. Increasing doses of doxorubicin, but not etoposide (a Topoisomerase II inhibitor devoid of cardiovascular toxicity), specifically induced the up-regulation of miR-208b, miR-216b, miR-215, miR-34c and miR-367 in rat hearts. Furthermore, the lowest dosing regime (1 mg/kg/week for 2 weeks) led to a detectable increase of miR-216b in the absence of histopathological findings or alteration of classical cardiac stress biomarkers. In silico microRNA target predictions suggested that a number of doxorubicin-responsive microRNAs may regulate mRNAs involved in cardiac tissue remodeling. In particular miR-34c was able to mediate the DOX-induced changes of Sipa1 mRNA (a mitogen-induced Rap/Ran GTPase activating protein) at the post-transcriptional level and in a seed sequence dependent manner. Our results show that integrated heart tissue microRNA and mRNA profiling can provide valuable early genomic biomarkers of drug-induced cardiac injury as well as novel mechanistic insight into the underlying molecular pathways.
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spelling pubmed-34092112012-08-02 Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina Bauer, Yasmina Berridge, Brian R. Bongiovanni, Sandrine Gerrish, Kevin Hamadeh, Hisham K. Letzkus, Martin Lyon, Jonathan Moggs, Jonathan Paules, Richard S. Pognan, François Staedtler, Frank Vidgeon-Hart, Martin P. Grenet, Olivier Couttet, Philippe PLoS One Research Article Anti-cancer therapy based on anthracyclines (DNA intercalating Topoisomerase II inhibitors) is limited by adverse effects of these compounds on the cardiovascular system, ultimately causing heart failure. Despite extensive investigations into the effects of doxorubicin on the cardiovascular system, the molecular mechanisms of toxicity remain largely unknown. MicroRNAs are endogenously transcribed non-coding 22 nucleotide long RNAs that regulate gene expression by decreasing mRNA stability and translation and play key roles in cardiac physiology and pathologies. Increasing doses of doxorubicin, but not etoposide (a Topoisomerase II inhibitor devoid of cardiovascular toxicity), specifically induced the up-regulation of miR-208b, miR-216b, miR-215, miR-34c and miR-367 in rat hearts. Furthermore, the lowest dosing regime (1 mg/kg/week for 2 weeks) led to a detectable increase of miR-216b in the absence of histopathological findings or alteration of classical cardiac stress biomarkers. In silico microRNA target predictions suggested that a number of doxorubicin-responsive microRNAs may regulate mRNAs involved in cardiac tissue remodeling. In particular miR-34c was able to mediate the DOX-induced changes of Sipa1 mRNA (a mitogen-induced Rap/Ran GTPase activating protein) at the post-transcriptional level and in a seed sequence dependent manner. Our results show that integrated heart tissue microRNA and mRNA profiling can provide valuable early genomic biomarkers of drug-induced cardiac injury as well as novel mechanistic insight into the underlying molecular pathways. Public Library of Science 2012-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3409211/ /pubmed/22859947 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040395 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vacchi-Suzzi, Caterina
Bauer, Yasmina
Berridge, Brian R.
Bongiovanni, Sandrine
Gerrish, Kevin
Hamadeh, Hisham K.
Letzkus, Martin
Lyon, Jonathan
Moggs, Jonathan
Paules, Richard S.
Pognan, François
Staedtler, Frank
Vidgeon-Hart, Martin P.
Grenet, Olivier
Couttet, Philippe
Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment
title Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment
title_full Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment
title_fullStr Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment
title_short Perturbation of microRNAs in Rat Heart during Chronic Doxorubicin Treatment
title_sort perturbation of micrornas in rat heart during chronic doxorubicin treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22859947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040395
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