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Age- and glycemia-related miR-126-3p levels in plasma and endothelial cells
Author(s) -
Fabiola Olivieri,
Massimiliano Bonafé,
Liana Spazzafumo,
Mirko Gobbi,
Francesco Prattichizzo,
Rina Recchioni,
Fiorella Marcheselli,
Lucia La Sala,
Roberta Galeazzi,
Maria Rita Rippo,
Gianluca Fulgenzi,
Sabrina Angelini,
Raffaella Lazzarini,
Anna Rita Bonfigli,
Francesca Brugè,
Luca Tiano,
Stefano Genovese,
Antonio Ceriello,
Massimo Boemi,
Claudio Franceschi,
Antonio Domenico Procopio,
Roberto Testa
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.100693
Subject(s) - senescence , glycemic , extracellular , endocrinology , diabetes mellitus , medicine , downregulation and upregulation , in vitro , in vivo , intracellular , andrology , chemistry , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , genetics , gene
Circulating miR-126-3p levels were determined in 136 healthy subjects (CTRs) aged 20-90 years and 193 patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DMs) aged 40-80 years, to explore the combined effect of age and glycemic state on miR-126-3p expression. Moreover, intra/extracellular miR-126-3p levels were measured in human endothelial cells (HUVECs) undergoing senescence under normo/hyper-glycemic conditions. Plasma miR-126-3p was significantly higher in the oldest compared with the youngest CTRs ( <45 vs. >75 years; relative expression: 0.27±0.29 vs. 0.48±0.39, p=0.047). Age-based comparison between CTRs and T2DM demonstrated significantly different miR-126-3p levels only in the oldest (0.48±0.39 vs. 0.22±0.23, p<0.005). After multiple adjustments, miR-126-3p levels were seen to be lower in patients with poor glycemic control, compared with age-matched CTRs. The age-related increase in plasma miR-126-3p found in CTRs was paralleled by a 5/6-fold increase in intra/extracellular miR-126-3p in in vitro-cultured HUVECs undergoing senescence. Notably, significant down- regulation of SPRED-1 protein, a validated miR-126-3p target, was found in senescent HUVECs. Moreover, miR-126-3p expression was down-regulated in intermediate-age HUVECs grown in high-glucose medium until senescence. Aging/senescence-associated miR-126-3p up-regulation is likely a senescence-associated compensatory mechanism that is blunted when endothelial cells are exposed to high glucose levels, a phenomenon that probably occurs in vivo in T2DM patients.

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