Effect of hypoxia-induced MicroRNA-210 expression on cardiovascular disease and the underlying mechanism

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Abstract

Cardiovascular diseases have high morbidity and mortality rates worldwide, and their treatment and prevention are challenging. MicroRNAs are a series of noncoding RNAs with highly conserved sequences and regulate gene expression by inhibiting mRNA transcription or degrading targeting proteins. MicroRNA-210 is significantly upregulated during hypoxia and plays a protective role by inhibiting apoptosis and regulating cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, mitochondrial metabolism, and angiogenesis in hypoxic cells. MicroRNA-210 expression is altered in cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, acute myocardial infarction, preeclampsia, aortic stenosis, and heart failure, and overexpression of microRNA-210 in some of these diseases exerts protective effects on target organs. Furthermore, chronically upregulated miR-210 potentially plays a marked pathogenic role in specific situations. This review primarily focuses on the upstream pathways, downstream targets, clinical progress in cardiovascular disease, and potential applications of microRNA-210.

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Guan, Y., Song, X., Sun, W., Wang, Y., & Liu, B. (2019). Effect of hypoxia-induced MicroRNA-210 expression on cardiovascular disease and the underlying mechanism. Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity. Hindawi Limited. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/4727283

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