4.7 Article

Microarray Study of Pathway Analysis Expression Profile Associated with MicroRNA-29a with Regard to Murine Cholestatic Liver Injuries

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms17030324

Keywords

TGF-beta signaling pathway; cholestasis; Wnt signaling pathway; liver fibrosis; bile duct ligation; miR-29a

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 104-2314-B-182A-118-MY2]
  2. National Health Research Institute, Taiwan [NHRI-EX105-10436SI]
  3. Chang and Gung Memorial Grants, Taiwan [CMRPG8B0873, 8B0992, 8B0993, 8D0032, 8D0112, 8E1171, CLRPG8B0042]

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Accumulating evidence demonstrates that microRNA-29 (miR-29) expression is prominently decreased in patients with hepatic fibrosis, which consequently stimulates hepatic stellate cells' (HSCs) activation. We used a cDNA microarray study to gain a more comprehensive understanding of genome-wide gene expressions by adjusting miR-29a expression in a bile duct-ligation (BDL) animal model. Methods: Using miR-29a transgenic mice and wild-type littermates and applying the BDL mouse model, we characterized the function of miR-29a with regard to cholestatic liver fibrosis. Pathway enrichment analysis and/or specific validation were performed for differentially expressed genes found within the comparisons. Results: Analysis of the microarray data identified a number of differentially expressed genes due to the miR-29a transgene, BDL, or both. Additional pathway enrichment analysis revealed that TGF-beta signaling had a significantly differential activated pathway depending on the occurrence of miR-29a overexpression or the lack thereof. Furthermore, overexpression was found to elicit changes in Wnt/beta-catenin after BDL. Conclusion: This study verified that an elevated miR-29a level could alleviate liver fibrosis caused by cholestasis. Furthermore, the protective effects of miR-29a correlate with the downregulation of TGF-beta and associated with Wnt/beta-catenin signal pathway following BDL.

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