4.7 Review

Role of Circular RNAs in Pulmonary Fibrosis

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231810493

Keywords

circRNA; pulmonary fibrosis; silicosis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81900064, 82170079]

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This article comprehensively summarizes the alteration and functional role of circRNAs in pulmonary fibrosis and discusses the diagnostic and therapeutic potential of targeting circRNAs and their regulatory pathway mediators.
Pulmonary fibrosis is a chronic progressive form of interstitial lung disease, characterized by the histopathological pattern of usual interstitial pneumonia. Apart from aberrant alterations of protein-coding genes, dysregulation of non-coding RNAs, including microRNAs, long non-coding RNAs, and circular RNAs (circRNAs), is crucial to the initiation and progression of pulmonary fibrosis. CircRNAs are single-stranded RNAs that form covalently closed loops without 5 ' caps and 3 ' tails. Different from canonical splicing of mRNA, they are produced from the back-splicing of precursor mRNAs and have unique biological functions, as well as potential biomedical implications. They function as important gene regulators through multiple actions, including sponging microRNAs and proteins, regulating transcription, and splicing, as well as protein-coding and translation in a cap-independent manner. This review comprehensively summarizes the alteration and functional role of circRNAs in pulmonary fibrosis, with a focus on the involvement of the circRNA in the context of cell-specific pathophysiology. In addition, we discuss the diagnostic and therapeutic potential of targeting circRNA and their regulatory pathway mediators, which may facilitate the translation of recent advances from bench to bedside in the future.

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