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MicroRNA‐17‐3p inhibits excessive post‐hypoxic autophagy and attenuates H9C2 cardiomyocytes reoxygenation injury via PTEN‐Akt‐mTOR signaling
Author(s) -
He Yi,
Cai Yin,
Yan Dan,
Zhang Dengwen,
Chen Chen,
Irwin Michael G.,
Wang Sheng,
Xia Zhengyuan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.2018.32.1_supplement.lb595
Subject(s) - pten , tensin , autophagy , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , protein kinase b , downregulation and upregulation , chemistry , reperfusion injury , hypoxia (environmental) , microrna , microbiology and biotechnology , cancer research , signal transduction , biology , apoptosis , medicine , ischemia , biochemistry , gene , organic chemistry , oxygen
Background The microRNA (miR)‐17~92 is one of the best‐characterized polycistronic miRNA clusters, which encodes six individual miRNAs and contributes to various cellular and biological processes. In particular, miR‐17‐3p (a passenger miRNA of miR‐17) has been shown to indirectly inhibit Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) and attenuate myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, but the underneath mechanism is unclear. Inhibition of PTEN can upregulate Akt/mTOR signaling and therefore suppresses the excessive autophagy, which may be a mechanism that underlies myocardial I/R injury. We, thus, hypothesized that miR‐17‐3p may protect against hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) induced cell injury by inhibiting post‐hypoxic excessive autophagy in H9C2 cardiomyocytes via PTEN‐Akt‐mTOR signaling pathway. Methods and results In rat H9C2 cardiomyocytes, H/R (6 hours hypoxia followed by 6 hours reoxygenation) significantly enhanced the expression of miR‐17‐3p (P <0.05 vs. Control), which was concomitant by increased lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) leakage (cell injury marker, P<0.05 vs. Control) and the levels of p62 and the ratio of LC3II/I (autophagy markers, P<0.05 vs. Control), suggesting that miR‐17‐3p may be involved in the pathogenesis of H/R induced autophagic cell death. To explore the potential role of miR‐17‐3p in H/R‐induced cell injury, H9C2 cells were transfected with the miR‐17‐3p agomir or its negative control. The overexpression of miR‐17‐3p can significantly attenuate H/R‐induced cell injury (reduced LDH level, P <0.05 vs. H/R) and inhibit H/R‐induced excessive autophagy (decreased levels of p62 and LC3II/I, P <0.05 vs. H/R). Given the important role of PTEN‐Akt‐mTOR signaling in autophagy, the effects of miR‐17‐3p on the key events in the PTEN‐Akt‐mTOR signaling cascade during H/R were examined. As anticipated, miR‐17‐3p overexpression significantly down‐regulated PTEN expression and up‐regulated the levels of phosphorylated Akt1 (Thr308) and mTOR (P<0.05 vs. H/R), indicating that the miR‐17‐3p may protect against excessive post‐hypoxic autophagic cell death in H9C2 cardiomyocytes via PTEN‐Akt‐mTOR signaling pathway. Conclusion Upregulating PTEN‐Akt‐mTOR axis and the subsequent inhibition of excessive autophagy may represent the major mechanism whereby miR‐17‐3p attenuates H/R injury in H9C2 cardiomyocytes. Support or Funding Information Studied supported by RGC/GRF grants (17158616M, 17117217 M) This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2018 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal .

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