4.7 Article

MYC-mediated silencing of miR-181a-5p promotes pathogenic Th17 responses by modulating AKT3-FOXO3 signaling

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2022.105176

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Tianjin Clinical Key Discipline Project
  3. [81970793]
  4. [82070929]
  5. [81870675]
  6. [TJLCZDXKT003]

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This study reveals that miR-181a-5p negatively regulates pathogenic Th17 cell responses by targeting AKT3 and activating FOXO3. Decreased miR-181a-5p and up-regulated AKT3 expression were found in uveitis patients. Intravitreal administration of miR-181a-5p mimics effectively attenuated clinical and pathological signs of established uveitis.
Pathogenic Th17 cells drive autoimmune pathology, but the molecular mechanisms underlying Th17 pathogenicity remain poorly understood. Here, we haves hown that miR-181a-5p was significantly decreased in pathogenic Th17 cells, and it negatively regulated pathogenic Th17 cell responses in vitro and in vivo. Th17 cells overexpressing miR-181a-5p exhibited impaired ability to induce pathogenesisin an adoptive transfer model of experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU). Mechanistically, miR-181a-5p directly targeted AKT3, diminishing AKT3-mediated phosphorylation of FOXO3, and thereby activating FOXO3, a transcriptional repressor of pathogenic Th17 cell program. Supporting this,decreasing miR-181a-5p and up-regulated AKT3 expression were found in uveitis patients. Furthermore, intravitreal administration of miR-181a-5p mimics in mice effectively attenuated clinical and pathological signs of established EAU. Collectively,our results reveal a previously unappreciated T cell-intrinsic role of miR181a-5pin restraining autoimmunity and may provide a potential therapeutic target for uveitis treatment.

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