4.7 Article

Degradation of Premature-miR-181b by the Translin/Trax RNase Increases Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Stiffness

期刊

HYPERTENSION
卷 78, 期 3, 页码 831-839

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.120.16690

关键词

aorta; cardiovascular diseases; microRNA degradation; risk factors; vascular smooth muscle; vasopressin

资金

  1. Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund [Mscrfd-4313]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [U54AG062333, U18TR003780, P01 HL114471, R01 DK035385]
  3. Johns Hopkins Synergy Award
  4. NIH [T32HL007227]
  5. Stimulating and Advancing ACCM Research
  6. Magic That Matters

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study reveals the crucial role of miR-181b in mediating arterial stiffness by regulating the stiffness of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), as well as the involvement of TN/TX RNase activity in this process. It suggests that therapeutic strategies targeting TN/TX-mediated reductions in miR-181b levels may provide protection against cardiovascular diseases related to large artery stiffness.
Large artery stiffness is a major risk factor underlying cardiovascular disease. However, the molecular mechanisms driving this pathological process are poorly understood. Previous studies indicate that the age-associated decline of miR-181b levels can accelerate aortic stiffening by activating TGF-beta (transforming growth factor beta) signaling. Here, we studied the physiological role of miR-181b in mediating arginine vasopressin (AVP)-induced stiffening of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) isolated from aorta. We found that AVP treatment increases VSMC stiffness and causes marked reductions in both pre-miR-181b and miR-181b expression. Transfecting VSMCs with a miR-181b mimic abolishes AVP-induced stiffening, indicating that this stiffening response is dependent on AVP's ability to reduce miR-181b levels. In addition, deletion of translin or inactivation of the TN/TX (translin/trax) RNAse prevents the AVP-induced decrease in pre-miR-181b/miR-181b levels and VSMC stiffening, indicating that these effects are mediated by this microRNA-degrading enzyme. Interestingly, AVP exposure increases extracellular TGF-beta levels in a TN/TX-dependent manner and pretreatment of VSMCs with TGF-beta neutralizing antibodies inhibits AVP-induced stiffness. Lastly, we have ascertained that age-associated aortic stiffening in vivo is prevented in mice homozygous for the TX (E126A) point mutation, which abolishes TN/TX RNase activity. Taken together, these findings provide compelling evidence that TN/TX RNase activity plays a critical role in regulating VSMC stiffness via degradation of pre-miR-181b and TGF-beta pathway activation. Our findings also indicate that therapeutic strategies capable of blocking TN/TX-mediated reductions in miR-181b levels may confer protection against large artery stiffness and associated cardiovascular diseases.

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