MicroRNAs with Altered Expression Profiles in Granulosa of Women of Advanced Age with Diminished Ovarian Reserve

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 2316-2323
Author(s):  
Danqi Liu ◽  
Fang Lian ◽  
Shan Xiang ◽  
Ying Guo ◽  
Haicui Wu ◽  
...  

Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the micro-RNA differences between women of advanced age with a diminished ovarian reserve (DOR) and young women with a normal ovarian reserve (NOR), and the causes leading to the decline of ovarian reserve function and oocyte function in women, which may be related to aging. Methods: The prospective cohort investigation method was used in this study. We used microRNA sequencing to detect the microRNA expression profiles for women of advanced age with DOR function and young women with NOR function. Then, the differentially expressed microRNAs were compared and the agerelated mechanism was predicted by the target genes. Results: The microRNA sequencing results revealed that 70 microRNA expressions were different, including 45 downregulated expressions and 25 upregulated expressions. Specifically, miR-221-3p, miR-146b-5p, miR-378a-3p, miR-143-5p, miR-222-5p, and miR-221-5p were significantly downregulated; miR-6881-3p, miR-4787-3p, miR-4745-5p, miR-6513-3p, and miR-3179 were upregulated. The primary pathways are PI3K-Akt, MAPK, Phospholipase D, and Chemokine. Conclusions: Differences were observed between the expression profiles of microRNAs in the granulosa cells of the ovaries of patients with DOR and NOR. These differences may be age-related.

2007 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. S66
Author(s):  
K. Greenseid ◽  
S. Jindal ◽  
M. Nihsen ◽  
J.M. Hurwitz ◽  
N.S. Santoro ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 892-899 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keri Greenseid ◽  
Sangita Jindal ◽  
Joshua Hurwitz ◽  
Nanette Santoro ◽  
Lubna Pal

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1488-1488
Author(s):  
Xiaomei Chen ◽  
Wei Xiong ◽  
Xiangjun Chen ◽  
Cong Lu ◽  
Fang Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1488 Microvesicles (MVs) released by leukemia cells constitute an important part of the leukemia microenvironment. As a cell-to-cell communication tool, MVs transfer microRNA(miRNA) between cells. MVs miRNAs may be valuable not only as a diagnostic tool but may also provide an insight in the role of miRNAs playing in the underlying of pathophysiologic processes of various leukemia. It is worth evaluating whether MVs possess some unique miRNA content depending on their corresponding leukemia origin that could be applicable in diagnosis. Hence, we determined the miRNA expression profiles of ALL-derived MVs using Agilent miRNA microarray analysis. The five miRNAs obtained by microarray profiling were validated using real-time PCR. The putative target genes were predicted by bioformation software. Here, we provided MVs miRNA patterns derived from the healthy controls, B-ALL cell line Nalm 6 cells and T-ALL cell line Jurkat cells. We identified 182 dysregulated miRNAs in MVs derived from Nalm 6 cells as compared with MVs from normal controls (P<0.05); both up regulated(123/182) and down regulated(59/182) expressions were observed. Likewise 166 miRNAs were significantly differentially expressed in MVs derived from Jurkat cells versus MVs from normal peripheral blood (P<0.05), 114 miRNAs of which (114/166) were up expression and 52 miRNAs (52/166) were down expression. We also fould that 44 miRNAs were only detected in B-ALL-derived MVs. MiR-1290, miR-1246, miR-1268, miR-1226, and miR-424 were top 5 expressed in Nalm 6 derived MVs, suggesting that those miRNAs may play an important role in B-ALL. We observed that 16 miRNAs detected only in T cell derived MVs. MiR-96 is up regulated in MVs from T-ALL cells but not expressed in B-ALL. Specific and functional target sites for miR-96, exist in the 3'-UTR of the miRNA that encodes the putative tumor suppressor transcription factor FOXO1. The expression signatures of miR-96 could discriminate B-ALL from T-ALL. In contrast, the MVs from B-ALL cell line, shared 100 miRNAs with MVs from T-ALL cell line, suggestting that those miRNAs play roles in both B-and T-ALL. Of 100 miRNAs, 99 miRNAs were high expression, indicating that miRNAs were active in ALL. This obsearvation suggusted that miRNA differential expression in MVs were partially significantly related to subtypes of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Intriguing is that miR1290 is top higher expression both in MVs derived from Nalm6 cells and from Jurkat cells; miR-1290 is 475-fold higher expressed in Nalm 6 derived MVs versus MVs from normal cells, whereas this miRNA is 245-fold higher expressed in Jurkat cells. Five of these miRNAs were selected to be further assayed and validated by PCR. The qRT-PCR results correlated well with the microarray data. In addition, we found seven miRNAs(miR-148b, miR-484, miR-let-7f, let-7a, miR-223, miR16 and miR-27b) were located near the 11q23 chromosomal region. With bioinformatic tools (TargetScan), we predicted potential target genes for those miRNAs that exhibited altered expression in MVs from B-ALL and T-ALL. The p85 subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) was found to be a potential target of miR-320. Of particular interest, we found that protein tyrosine phosphatase-like member b (PTPLB) may be a potential target of miR-1290. The 474-fold increase in miR-1290 in MVs from Nalm 6 cells, indicating that miR-1290 may participate in the modulation of leukemia by targeting PTPLB, a specific, negative regulator of p210 bcr-abl signal. In conclusion, we identified miRNAs and found that miRNA expression profiles were ALL subtype-specific. Altered miRNA expression levels may lead to an inappropriate expression of target oncoproteins or target tumor suppressors, thereby facilitating the development of leukemia. These findings expanded the potential diagnostic markers of leukemia and provided useful information to ALL pathogenesis. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 64-64
Author(s):  
Joanne Margaret Ramsey ◽  
Glenda Joanne Dickson ◽  
Janetta Jacoba Bijl ◽  
Ken I. Mills ◽  
Terence R.J. Lappin ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 64 Altered expression of the HOX-MEIS axis is associated with leukemia, particularly AML, where it plays a role in increased proliferation and impaired differentiation. Particular focus has been placed on the role of HOX-MEIS in leukemia with MLL gene rearrangements and MLL-fusion induced models that represent this poor prognostic subgroup. However more recently, we and others have identified altered expression of HOX-MEIS in AML with normal karyotype (AML-NK) that accounts for the vast majority of patients with this disease. The prognostic outcome of this large subgroup of patients is varied and may depend on other molecular aberrations such as NPM-1 mutation, FLT3-ITD or CEBPB status. A murine model of leukemia using co-overexpression of HOXA9-MEIS1 was developed to investigate their role in an AML-NK setting. Expression levels of the collaborating oncogenes was limited by combination of a bicistronic ires targeting vector, low titre retroviral infection and limiting dilution assay (LDA). HOXA9 and MEIS1 expression was measured using quantitiative PCR (qPCR) and levels obtained in the mouse were similar to those observed for AML-NK patients. The resultant leukemia was transplantable leading to premature death in non-irradiated recipient mice within 30 days (104 cells transplanted). Observed pathology included circulating blasts in the periphery, splenomegaly, tissue infiltration of blast cells (kidney, lung, liver) and enlarged lymph nodes, indicative of leukemia. Blast cells were identified as Kit+, Gr-1+, Mac-1+, CD150lo consistent with a myeloid progenitor phenotype. To evaluate downstream events associated with the leukaemic phenotype TaqMan-based Low Density Arrays (TLDAs) and Open Arrays (Biotrove) were used to obtain gene and microRNA (mIR) expression profiles. The majority of genes assayed 699/821 were either not expressed or showed no appreciable change in expression (ΔΔCT < 2) between the leukaemic and normal bone marrow control samples. Of those genes that showed a measurable change in expression, 111/122 assessed in the pluripotent stem cell, transcription factor and immune arrays were downregulated in the HOXA9-MEIS1 induced leukemia samples compared to control mice (n=4 per group). Individual assays were designed for a subset of candidate genes and validated against the TLDA results. Several genes identified as consistently downregulated in the leukaemic cells, including Smad1 and E2f7, were associated with negative regulation of cell proliferation using DAVID Bioinformatics Resources 6.7. Consistent increased expression of HOXA9 and MEIS1 was confirmed by individual assays as was elevated Elf5, Cd34 and Cd28 levels. mIRs regulate the expression of protein-coding genes in part through cleavage of targeted transcripts by partial or complete base pairing. A growing number of mIRs are differentially regulated in normal and malignant hematopoiesis, where increased mIR levels are associated with downregulation of target gene subsets. mIR expression profiles were compared between leukemic and control mice to investigate their association with the global downregulation of gene expression observed in the leukaemic model. Approximately 16% (48/303) of the mIRs showed measurable changes in expression levels (ΔΔCT >2) between the two models, with >70% (34/48) demonstrating increased expression, up to 360-fold, in the leukemia samples. Candidate mIRs were further examined using the mirDB and/or miRecords target prediction databases. Several of the leukaemia-associated upreglated mIRs putatively target members of the validated subset of downregulated genes e.g. mIR-466c and mIR-181c are predicted to target Smad1 and E2F7 respectively. This study suggests that HOXA9-MEIS1 leukemogenesis occurs in part due to increased expression of a subset of mIRs that are predicted to target genes associated with inhibition of proliferation in an AML-NK model. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2015 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 1513-1526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lianjun Pan ◽  
Jiehua Ma ◽  
Feng Pan ◽  
Dan Zhao ◽  
Jianping Gao

Background/Aims: Erectile dysfunction (ED) in aged people remains a topic of interest to andrological physicians. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), which form the largest group of non-coding RNAs, have been shown to regulate various biological processes. The function of lncRNAs in age-related erectile dysfunction (A-ED) pathogenesis remains poorly understood. Methods: This study aims to assess the differential expression profiles of mRNAs and lncRNAs between A-ED and normal control (NC) samples. Using a second-generation lncRNA microarray, we detected a total of 8,744 lncRNAs and 13,585 coding transcripts. Results: We identified 608 up-regulated and 406 down-regulated lncRNAs in A-ED compared with NC samples, by setting a filter of fold-change >2.0. Gene Ontology and pathway analysis revealed that a muscle contraction disorder induced by abnormal ion channels might play a critical role in the pathogenesis of A-ED. Conclusion: Our results show significantly altered expression profiles of lncRNAs and mRNAs between A-ED and NC. This study may provide information for further research on A-ED and may be helpful for finding a new therapeutic target for A-ED.


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