4.8 Article

Transcoronary Concentration Gradients of Circulating MicroRNAs

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 124, Issue 18, Pages 1936-1944

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.111.037572

Keywords

acute coronary syndrome; coronary circulation; coronary artery disease; microRNA

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [Sonderforschungsbereich 834]
  2. B1
  3. Excellence Cluster Cardiopulmonary System [EXC 147/1]

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Background-Circulating levels of microRNA (miR) have been proposed as biomarkers for cardiovascular disease. To identify the heart as a potential source for miRs released into the circulation, we measured concentration gradients across the coronary circulation for muscle-enriched (miR-133a, miR-499, miR-208a), vascular (miR-126, miR-92a), leukocyte-related (miR-155), and platelet-enriched (miR-223) miRs. Methods and Results-Circulating miRs were measured by TaqMan polymerase chain reaction in EDTA-plasma simultaneously obtained from the aorta and the coronary venous sinus in patients without coronary artery disease (n = 7), with stable coronary artery disease (n = 31), and with troponin-positive acute coronary syndromes (n = 19). Circulating levels of the muscle-enriched miR-499 (>20-fold; P < 0.01), miR-133a (11-fold; P < 0.01), and miR-208a (5-fold; P < 0.01) were significantly elevated in the aorta of troponin-positive acute coronary syndrome patients compared with patients with coronary artery disease. Importantly, there was a significant increase in circulating levels of miR-499 and miR-133a across the coronary circulation in troponin-positive acute coronary syndrome patients, suggestive of a release into the coronary circulation during myocardial injury. Indeed, miR-499 concentration gradients were significantly correlated with the extent of myocardial damage as measured by high-sensitivity troponin T (r = 0.70, P < 0.01). In contrast, circulating levels of miR-126 (P = 0.16) decreased during transcoronary passage in patients with evidence of myocardial injury, suggesting consumption during transcoronary passage. Conclusions-Muscle-enriched miR-499 and miR-133a are released from the heart into the coronary circulation on myocardial injury, whereas the vascular miR-126 is consumed during transcoronary passage. The differential regulation of circulating miRs during the transcoronary passage might provide important insights to exploit their role as cardiac biomarkers.

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