Delayed ischemic preconditioning contributes to renal protection by upregulation of miR-21
Author(s) -
Xialian Xu,
Alison J. Kriegel,
Yong Liu,
Kristie Usa,
Domagoj Mladinov,
Hong Liu,
Yi Fang,
Xiaoqiang Ding,
Mingyu Liang
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
kidney international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.499
H-Index - 276
eISSN - 1523-1755
pISSN - 0085-2538
DOI - 10.1038/ki.2012.241
Subject(s) - ischemic preconditioning , downregulation and upregulation , ischemia , renal ischemia , kidney , medicine , gene knockdown , acute kidney injury , apoptosis , hypoxia (environmental) , reperfusion injury , pharmacology , biology , chemistry , biochemistry , gene , organic chemistry , oxygen
Delayed ischemic preconditioning effectively protects kidneys from ischemia-reperfusion injury but the mechanism underlying renal protection remains poorly understood. Here we examined the in vivo role of microRNA miR-21 in the renal protection conferred by delayed ischemic preconditioning in mice. A 15-min renal ischemic preconditioning significantly increased the expression of miR-21 by 4 h and substantially attenuated ischemia-reperfusion injury induced 4 days later. A locked nucleic acid-modified anti-miR-21 given at the time of ischemic preconditioning knocked down miR-21 and significantly exacerbated subsequent ischemia-reperfusion injury in the mouse kidney. Knockdown of miR-21 resulted in significant upregulation of programmed cell death protein 4, a proapoptotic target gene of miR-21, and substantially increased tubular cell apoptosis. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1α in the kidney was activated after ischemic preconditioning and blockade of its activity with a decoy abolished the upregulation of miR-21 in cultured human renal epithelial cells treated with the inducer cobalt chloride. In the absence of ischemic preconditioning, knockdown of miR-21 alone did not significantly affect ischemia-reperfusion injury in the mouse kidney. Thus, upregulation of miR-21 contributes to the protective effect of delayed ischemic preconditioning against subsequent renal ischemia-reperfusion injury.
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