Hypoxia Regulates MicroRNA Expression in the Human Carotid Body

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Abstract

How hypoxia regulates gene expression in the human carotid body (CB) remains poorly understood. While limited information on transcriptional regulation in animal CBs is available, the impact of important post-transcriptional regulators, such as non-coding RNAs, and in particular miRNAs is not known. Here we show using ex vivo experiments that indeed a number of miRNAs are differentially regulated in surgically removed human CB slices when acute hypoxic conditions were applied. Analysis of the hypoxia-regulated miRNAs shows that they target biological pathways with upregulation of functions related to cell proliferation and immune response and downregulation of cell differentiation and cell death functions. Comparative analysis of the human CB miRNAome with the global miRNA expression patterns of a large number of different human tissues showed that the CB miRNAome had a unique profile which reflects its highly specialized functional status. Nevertheless, the human CB miRNAome is most closely related to the miRNA expression pattern of brain tissues indicating that they may have the most similar developmental origins.

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Mkrtchian, S., Lee, K. L., Kåhlin, J., Ebberyd, A., Poellinger, L., Fagerlund, M. J., & Eriksson, L. I. (2018). Hypoxia Regulates MicroRNA Expression in the Human Carotid Body. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 1071, pp. 25–33). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-91137-3_3

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