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MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression

Blood microRNA (miRNA) levels have been associated with and shown to participate in disease pathophysiology. However, the hematopoietic cell of origin of blood miRNAs and the individual blood cell miRNA profiles are poorly understood. We report the miRNA content of highly purified normal hematopoiet...

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Autores principales: Teruel-Montoya, Raul, Kong, Xianguo, Abraham, Shaji, Ma, Lin, Kunapuli, Satya P., Holinstat, Michael, Shaw, Chad A., McKenzie, Steven E., Edelstein, Leonard C., Bray, Paul F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4100820/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25029370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102259
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author Teruel-Montoya, Raul
Kong, Xianguo
Abraham, Shaji
Ma, Lin
Kunapuli, Satya P.
Holinstat, Michael
Shaw, Chad A.
McKenzie, Steven E.
Edelstein, Leonard C.
Bray, Paul F.
author_facet Teruel-Montoya, Raul
Kong, Xianguo
Abraham, Shaji
Ma, Lin
Kunapuli, Satya P.
Holinstat, Michael
Shaw, Chad A.
McKenzie, Steven E.
Edelstein, Leonard C.
Bray, Paul F.
author_sort Teruel-Montoya, Raul
collection PubMed
description Blood microRNA (miRNA) levels have been associated with and shown to participate in disease pathophysiology. However, the hematopoietic cell of origin of blood miRNAs and the individual blood cell miRNA profiles are poorly understood. We report the miRNA content of highly purified normal hematopoietic cells from the same individuals. Although T-cells, B-cells and granulocytes had the highest miRNA content per cell, erythrocytes contributed more cellular miRNA to the blood, followed by granulocytes and platelets. miRNA profiling revealed different patterns and different expression levels of miRNA specific for each lineage. miR-30c-5p was determined to be an appropriate reference normalizer for cross-cell qRT-PCR comparisons. miRNA profiling of 5 hematopoietic cell lines revealed differential expression of miR-125a-5p. We demonstrated endogenous levels of miR-125a-5p regulate reporter gene expression in Meg-01 and Jurkat cells by (1) constructs containing binding sites for miR-125a-5p or (2) over-expressing or inhibiting miR-125a-5p. This quantitative analysis of the miRNA profiles of peripheral blood cells identifies the circulating hematopoietic cellular miRNAs, supports the use of miRNA profiles for distinguishing different hematopoietic lineages and suggests that endogenously expressed miRNAs can be exploited to regulate transgene expression in a cell-specific manner.
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spelling pubmed-41008202014-07-18 MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression Teruel-Montoya, Raul Kong, Xianguo Abraham, Shaji Ma, Lin Kunapuli, Satya P. Holinstat, Michael Shaw, Chad A. McKenzie, Steven E. Edelstein, Leonard C. Bray, Paul F. PLoS One Research Article Blood microRNA (miRNA) levels have been associated with and shown to participate in disease pathophysiology. However, the hematopoietic cell of origin of blood miRNAs and the individual blood cell miRNA profiles are poorly understood. We report the miRNA content of highly purified normal hematopoietic cells from the same individuals. Although T-cells, B-cells and granulocytes had the highest miRNA content per cell, erythrocytes contributed more cellular miRNA to the blood, followed by granulocytes and platelets. miRNA profiling revealed different patterns and different expression levels of miRNA specific for each lineage. miR-30c-5p was determined to be an appropriate reference normalizer for cross-cell qRT-PCR comparisons. miRNA profiling of 5 hematopoietic cell lines revealed differential expression of miR-125a-5p. We demonstrated endogenous levels of miR-125a-5p regulate reporter gene expression in Meg-01 and Jurkat cells by (1) constructs containing binding sites for miR-125a-5p or (2) over-expressing or inhibiting miR-125a-5p. This quantitative analysis of the miRNA profiles of peripheral blood cells identifies the circulating hematopoietic cellular miRNAs, supports the use of miRNA profiles for distinguishing different hematopoietic lineages and suggests that endogenously expressed miRNAs can be exploited to regulate transgene expression in a cell-specific manner. Public Library of Science 2014-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4100820/ /pubmed/25029370 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102259 Text en © 2014 Teruel-Montoya et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Teruel-Montoya, Raul
Kong, Xianguo
Abraham, Shaji
Ma, Lin
Kunapuli, Satya P.
Holinstat, Michael
Shaw, Chad A.
McKenzie, Steven E.
Edelstein, Leonard C.
Bray, Paul F.
MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression
title MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression
title_full MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression
title_fullStr MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression
title_full_unstemmed MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression
title_short MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression
title_sort microrna expression differences in human hematopoietic cell lineages enable regulated transgene expression
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4100820/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25029370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102259
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