Analyasis of the functional role of microRN as in regulating macrophage mediated inflammatory responses
Analyasis of the functional role of microRN as in regulating macrophage mediated inflammatory responses
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Date
2016-05-08
Authors
Malathi, Talari
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Publisher
University of Hyderabad
Abstract
Unrestrained inflammation frequently observed in chronic inflammatory diseases such as
insulin resistance, Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) and several types of cancers is prominently due
to imbalances in different activation states of macrophages. Delineation of the regulatory
mechanisms underlying macrophage polarization may help us to better understand the
pathophysiological basis of inflammation linked diseases. MicroRNAs are posttranscriptional regulatory molecules that drive distinct biological processes such as
proliferation, cell survival, differentiation and inflammation. However, the functional role
of microRNAs in inflammation induced insulin resistance is poorly studied. Thus, there is
a necessity to study the involvement of microRNAs in inflammation induced insulin
resistance (IR), as IR is the leading cause of diabetes. With this objective we sought to
understand the regulatory role of microRNAs in macrophage polarization and insulin
resistance.
Our microRNA microarray data revealed several microRNAs that were differentially
regulated in polarized macrophages. Among them, we investigated the functional roles of
two microRNAs: miR-712 and miR-16 whose expression levels were down-regulated in
macrophages exposed to pro-inflammatory stimuli such as LPS+IFNγ and palmitate.
Additionally, we have observed that miR-16 expression is also down-regulated in
palmitate exposed myoblasts, ER stress inducer (tunicamycin and thapsigargin) treated
myoblasts and insulin responsive tissues of high sucrose diet (HSD) induced insulin
resistant rats. On the other hand unlike in macrophages, miR-712 expression levels were
observed to be increased in myoblasts upon exposure to stress inducers such as palmitate,
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tunicamycin and thapsigargin pointing to potential cell specific effects. Investigating the
direct role of miR-712 in skeletal muscle may help us in better understanding of insulin
mediated effects in physiology and disease.
We next noted that ectopic expression of miR-712 and miR-16 in macrophages reduced
the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, IL-6 and IFN-β which in
turn led to improved insulin sensitivity in insulin resistant (IR) skeletal myoblasts
suggesting reduced paracrine inhibitory effects of LPS+IFNγ polarized macrophages on
skeletal myoblasts insulin sensitivity. In addition we observed that forced expression of
miR-16 directly in myoblasts augmented insulin stimulated glucose uptake via upregulation of two key players: GLUT4 and MEF2A that are involved in insulin
stimulated glucose uptake.
Mechanistic analysis revealed LRRK2 (a serine / threonine protein kinase associated with
inflammatory diseases such as Crohn’s and Parkinson’s disease) as the target of miR-712.
Further over-expression of miR-712 resulted in reduced phosphorylation of p38 and
ERK1/2, key players involved in inflammatory gene expression suggesting that miR-712
is positioned to control macrophage mediated pro-inflammatory responses.
Collectively, our data demonstrates the pivotal roles of microRNAs miR-712 and miR-16
in alleviating inflammation induced insulin resistance for the first time. Exploring the
pathophysiological roles of these microRNAs may further help us in understanding the
progression and treatment of T2D. MicroRNA-712 and miR-16 dampen macrophage mediated pro-inflammatory
responses and improve insulin mediated glucose uptake in myoblasts. (A) miR712 expression is down-regulated in LPS +IFNγ polarized macrophages. Ectopic
expression of miR-712 attenuated macrophage pro-inflammatory responses and their
paracrine inhibitory effects on myoblast insulin sensitivity. Mechanistic analysis
showed that miR-712 directly targets LRRK2 resulting in decreased phosphorylation
of p38 and ERK1/2 in macrophages. (B) miR-16 expression is down-regulated in
LPS+IFNγ and palmitate stimulated macrophages and in palmitate, tunicamycin and
thapsigargin treated myoblasts. Importantly, forced expression of miR-16 into
macrophages improved myoblast insulin sensitivity by enhancing GLUT4 and
MEF2A expression levels.
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Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES::Chemistry::Biochemistry