micro-RNAs dependent regulation of DNMT and HIF1α gene expression in thrombotic disorders

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are involved in a wide variety of cellular processes and post-transcriptionally regulate several mechanism and diseases. However, contribution of miRNAs functioning during hypoxia and DNA methylation together is less understood. The current study was aimed to find a shared miRNAs...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2019-03, Vol.9 (1), p.4815-4815, Article 4815
Hauptverfasser: Vijay, Aatira, Jha, Prabhash Kumar, Garg, Iti, Sharma, Manish, Ashraf, Mohammad Zahid, Kumar, Bhuvnesh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are involved in a wide variety of cellular processes and post-transcriptionally regulate several mechanism and diseases. However, contribution of miRNAs functioning during hypoxia and DNA methylation together is less understood. The current study was aimed to find a shared miRNAs signature upstream to hypoxia (via HIF gene family members) and methylation (via DNMT gene family members). This was followed by the global validation of the hypoxia related miRNA signature using miRNA microarray meta-analysis of the hypoxia induced human samples. We further concluded the study by looking into thrombosis related terms and pathways enriched during protein-protein interaction (PPI) network analysis of these two sets of gene family. Network prioritization of these shared miRNAs reveals miR-129, miR-19band miR-23b as top regulatory miRNAs. A comprehensive meta-analysis of microarray datasets of hypoxia samples revealed 29 differentially expressed miRNAs. GSEA of the interacting genes in the DNMT-HIF PPI network indicated thrombosis associated pathways including “Hemostasis”, “TPO signaling pathway” and “angiogenesis”. Interestingly, the study has generated a novel database of candidate miRNA signatures shared between hypoxia and methylation, and their relation to thrombotic pathways, which might aid in the development of potential therapeutic biomarkers.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-018-38057-6