2012年9月19日星期三

Immunopathologic processes in sympathetic ophthalmia as signified by microRNA profiling.

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Immunopathologic processes in sympathetic ophthalmia as signified by microRNA profiling.

Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2012;53(7):4197-204

Authors: Kaneko Y, Wu GS, Saraswathy S, Vasconcelos-Santos DV, Rao NA

Abstract
PURPOSE: Recent discovery of microRNAs and their negative gene regulation have provided new understanding in the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases. This study demonstrated microRNA expression profiling and their likely role in sympathetic ophthalmia, using formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded samples.
METHODS: Two groups of four enucleated globes (total eight globes) from patients with clinical and histopathological diagnosis of SO (experimental samples) and one group of four age-matched, noninflamed enucleated globes (control samples) were used. Human genome-wide microRNA PCR array was performed and results were subjected to bioinformatics calculation and P values stringency tests. The targets were searched using the recently published and periodically updated miRWalk software. Quantitative real-time PCR and immunohistochemical staining were performed to confirm the validated targets in the mRNA and in the protein levels, respectively.
RESULTS: No microRNA was significantly upregulated in SO, but 27 microRNAs were significantly downregulated. Among these, four microRNAs (hsa-miR-1, hsa-let-7e, hsa-miR-9, and hsa-miR-182) were known to be associated with the inflammatory signaling pathway. Only hsa-miR-9 has the validated targets, tumor necrosis factor-?, and nuclear factor kappa B1, which have been previously shown to be associated with mitochondrial oxidative stress-mediated photoreceptor apoptosis in eyes with SO.
CONCLUSIONS: Identification of altered levels of microRNAs by microRNA expression profiling may yield new insights into the pathogenesis of SO by disclosing specific microRNA signatures. In the future these may be targeted by synthetic microRNA mimic-based therapeutic strategies.

PMID: 22589448 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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