4.7 Article

Distinct Age-Specific miRegulome Profiling of Isolated Small and Large Intestinal Epithelial Cells in Mice

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073544

Keywords

intestinal epithelial cells; aging; microRNA; cellular senescence

Funding

  1. IMSUT Joint Research Project
  2. American Heart Association [19POST34410076]
  3. American Brain Foundation [19POST34410076, 18H05280]
  4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [18H05280]
  5. Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology Program of the Japan Science and Technology Agency for Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development (SATREPS)
  6. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
  7. AMED SATREPS [20jm0110012h0006]
  8. AMED Cyclic Innovation for Clinical Empowerment (CiCLE) [17pc0101001h0001]
  9. AMED Seeds B [19lm0203082h0001]
  10. AMED Acceleration Transformative Research for Medical Innovation Set-up Scheme (ACT-MS) [20im0210623h0002]
  11. AMED [20fk0108122h0001]
  12. AMED-Practical Research Project for Allergic Diseases and Immunology
  13. NIH [P30 DK120515]
  14. [16K08581]
  15. [19K09392]
  16. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H05280] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The intestinal epithelium serves as a dynamic barrier that senses inflammatory signals in the gut environment, modulating phenotypic changes in response. With aging, dysregulation of miRNAs in intestinal epithelial cells is observed, leading to compromised barrier function and increased inflammation.
The intestinal epithelium serves as a dynamic barrier to protect the host tissue from exposure to a myriad of inflammatory stimuli in the luminal environment. Intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) encompass differentiated and specialized cell types that are equipped with regulatory genes, which allow for sensing of the luminal environment. Potential inflammatory cues can instruct IECs to undergo a diverse set of phenotypic alterations. Aging is a primary risk factor for a variety of diseases; it is now well-documented that aging itself reduces the barrier function and turnover of the intestinal epithelium, resulting in pathogen translocation and immune priming with increased systemic inflammation. In this study, we aimed to provide an effective epigenetic and regulatory outlook that examines age-associated alterations in the intestines through the profiling of microRNAs (miRNAs) on isolated mouse IECs. Our microarray analysis revealed that with aging, there is dysregulation of distinct clusters of miRNAs that was present to a greater degree in small IECs (22 miRNAs) compared to large IECs (three miRNAs). Further, miRNA-mRNA interaction network and pathway analyses indicated that aging differentially regulates key pathways between small IECs (e.g., toll-like receptor-related cascades) and large IECs (e.g., cell cycle, Notch signaling and small ubiquitin-related modifier pathway). Taken together, current findings suggest novel gene regulation pathways by epithelial miRNAs in aging within the gastrointestinal tissues.

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