MicroRNA-155 expression with Brucella infection in vitro and in vivo and decreased serum levels of MicroRNA-155 in patients with brucellosis

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Abstract

Infection with Brucella is characterized by the inhibition of host immune responses. MicroRNA-155 (miR-155) has been implicated in the immune response to many diseases. In this study, its expression during Brucella 16M infection of macrophages and mice was analyzed. Expression of miR-155 was significantly induced in macrophages at 24 h post infection. Further, an analysis of infected mice showed that miR-155 was inhibited at 7 and 14 days but induced at 28 days. Interestingly, this trend in induction or inhibition was reversed at 7 and 14 days in 16M△virB-infected mice. This suggested that decreased expression of miR-155 at an early stage of infection was dependent on intracellular replication. In humans with brucellosis, serum levels of miR-155 were significantly decreased compared to those in individuals without brucellosis and healthy volunteers. Significant correlations were observed between serum level of miR-155 and serum anti-Brucella antibody titers and the sweating symptom. This effect suggests that Brucella interferes with miR-155-regulated immune responses via a unique mechanism. Taken together, data from this study indicate that Brucella infection affects miR-155 expression and that human brucellosis patients show decreased serum levels of miR-155.

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Zhang, X., Chen, J., Cheng, H., Zhu, J., Dong, Q., Zhang, H., & Chen, Z. (2022). MicroRNA-155 expression with Brucella infection in vitro and in vivo and decreased serum levels of MicroRNA-155 in patients with brucellosis. Scientific Reports, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-08180-6

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