4.4 Review

Micro-RNA: A Future Approach to Personalized Diagnosis of Bone Diseases

Journal

CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL
Volume 112, Issue 2, Pages 271-287

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00223-022-00959-z

Keywords

Osteoporosis; Bone metabolism; Fracture risk; Micro-RNA; Clinical studies

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Osteoporosis is a prevalent bone disease and circulating microRNAs have shown potential as diagnostic and prognostic markers. However, the lack of standardization and harmonization of methods limits their application.
Osteoporosis is a highly prevalent bone disease worldwide and the most studied bone-associated pathological condition. Although its diagnosis makes use of advanced and clinically relevant imaging and biochemical tools, the information suffers from several limitations and has little or no prognostic value. In this context, circulating micro-RNAs represent a potentially attractive alternative or a useful addition to the diagnostic arsenal and offer a greater prognostic potential than the conventional approaches. These short non-coding RNA molecules act as inhibitors of gene expression by targeting messenger RNAs with different degrees of complementarity, establishing a complex multilevel network, the basis for the fine modulation of gene expression that finally regulates every single activity of a cell. Micro-RNAs may passively and/or actively be released in the circulation by source cells, and being measurable in biological fluids, their concentrations may be associated to specific pathophysiological conditions. Mounting, despite debatable, evidence supports the use of micro-RNAs as markers of bone cell metabolic activity and bone diseases. Indeed, several micro-RNAs have been associated with bone mineral density, fractures and osteoporosis. However, concerns such as absence of comparability between studies and, the lack of standardization and harmonization of the methods, limit their application. In this review, we describe the pathophysiological bases of the association between micro-RNAs and the deregulation of bone cells activity and the processes that led to the identification of potential micro-RNA-based markers associated with metabolic bone diseases.

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