4.3 Article

MicroRNA expressing profiles in A53T mutant alpha-synuclein transgenic mice and Parkinsonian

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 15-28

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13905

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; A53T mutation; microRNAs; deep sequencing; Gerotarget

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFC1306600]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81271428, 81471292, U1503222, 81430021, 2015DQU012]
  3. Science Foundation of Guangdong of China [2015A030311021]
  4. technology project of Guangzhou [201504281820463]
  5. international project of science and technology for Guangdong [2016A050502025]

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a-synuclein gene mutations can cause a-synuclein protein aggregation in the midbrain of Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play a key role in the metabolism of a-synuclein but the mechanism involved in synucleinopathy remains unclear. In this study, we investigated the miRNA profiles in A53T-a-synuclein transgenic mice and analyzed the candidate miRNAs in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of PD patients. The 12-month A53T-transgenic mouse displayed hyperactive movement and anxiolytic-like behaviors with a-synuclein aggregation in midbrain. A total of 317,759 total and 289,207 unique small RNA sequences in the midbrain of mice were identified by high-throughput deep sequencing. We found 644 miRNAs were significantly changed in the transgenic mice. Based on the conserved characteristic of miRNAs, we selected 11 candidates from the 40 remarkably expressed miRNAs and explored their expression in 44 CSF samples collected from PD patients. The results revealed that 11 microRNAs were differently expressed in CSF, emphatically as miR-144-5p, miR-200a-3p and miR-542-3p, which were dramatically up-regulated in both A53T-transgenic mice and PD patients, and had a helpful accuracy for the PD prediction. The ordered logistic regression analysis showed that the severity of PD has strong correlation with an up-expression of miR-144-5p, miR-200a-3p and miR-542-3p in CSF. Taken together, our data suggested that miRNAs in CSF, such as miR-144-5p, miR-200a-3p and miR-542-3p, may be useful to the PD diagnosis as potential biomarkers.

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