Extracellular RNAs are associated with insulin resistance and metabolic phenotypes

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE Insulin resistance (IR) is a hallmark of obesity and metabolic disease. Circulating extracellular RNAs (ex-RNAs), stable RNA molecules in plasma, may play a role in IR, though most studies on ex-RNAs in IR are small. We sought to characterize the relationship between ex-RNAs and metabolic phenotypes in a large communitybased human cohort. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We measured circulating plasma ex-RNAs in 2, 317 participants without diabetes in the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) Offspring Cohort at cycle 8 and defined associations between ex-RNAs and IR (measured by circulating insulin level). We measured association between candidate ex-RNAs and markers of adiposity. Sensitivity analyses included individuals with diabetes. In a separate cohort of 90 overweight/obese youth, we measured selected ex-RNAs and metabolites. Biology of candidate microRNAs was investigated in silico. RESULTS The mean age of FHS participants was 65.8 years (56% female), with average BMI 27.7 kg/m2; participants in the youth cohort had a mean age of 15.5 years (60% female), withmeanBMI 33.8 kg/m2. In age-, sex-, and BMI-adjustedmodels across 391 ex-RNAs in FHS, 18 ex-RNAs were associated with IR (ofwhich 16 were microRNAs). miR-122 was associated with IR and regional adiposity in adults and IR in children (independent of metabolites). Pathway analysis revealed metabolic regulatory roles formiR-122, including regulation of IR pathways (AMPK, target of rapamycin signaling, and mitogen-activated protein kinase). CONCLUSIONS These results provide translational evidence in support of an important role of ex-RNAs as novel circulating factors implicated in IR.

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Shah, R., Murthy, V., Pacold, M., Danielson, K., Tanriverdi, K., Larson, M. G., … Freedman, J. E. (2017). Extracellular RNAs are associated with insulin resistance and metabolic phenotypes. Diabetes Care, 40(4), 546–553. https://doi.org/10.2337/dc16-1354

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