4.7 Article

MiR-378a suppresses tenogenic differentiation and tendon repair by targeting at TGF-β2

Journal

STEM CELL RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13287-019-1216-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81430049, 81772322, 81772404]
  2. Hong Kong Government Research Grant Council, General Research Fund [14120118, 14160917, 9054014 N_CityU102/15, T13-402/17-N]
  3. Hong Kong Innovation Technology Commission Funds [ITS/UIM-305]
  4. SMART program, Lui Che Woo Institute of Innovative Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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BackgroundTendons are a crucial component of the musculoskeletal system and responsible for transmission forces derived from muscle to bone. Patients with tendon injuries are often observed with decreased collagen production and matrix degeneration, and healing of tendon injuries remains a challenge as a result of limited understanding of tendon biology. Recent studies highlight the contribution of miR-378a on the regulation gene expression during tendon differentiation.MethodsWe examined the tendon microstructure and tendon repair with using miR-378a knock-in transgenic mice, and the tendon-derived stem cells were also isolated from transgenic mice to study their tenogenic differentiation ability. Meanwhile, the expression levels of tenogenic markers were also examined in mouse tendon-derived stem cells transfected with miR-378a mimics during tenogenic differentiation. With using online prediction software and luciferase reporter assay, the binding target of miR-378a was also studied.ResultsOur results indicated miR-378a impairs tenogenic differentiation and tendon repair by inhibition collagen and extracellular matrix production both in vitro and in vivo. We also demonstrated that miR-378a exert its inhibitory role during tenogenic differentiation through binding at TGF2 by luciferase reporter assay and western blot.ConclusionsOur investigation suggests that miR-378a could be considered as a new potential biomarker for tendon injury diagnosis or drug target for a possible therapeutic approach in future clinical practice.

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