MiR-202-3p inhibits foam cell formation and is associated with coronary heart disease risk in a Chinese population

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Abstract

A previous study and a gene-annotation enrichment analysis for potential targets of the microRNA miR-202-3p both suggest that this microRNA might be implicated in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. In the present study, the role of miR-202-3p in the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease (CHD) was explored. We conduct a case-control study to detect the expression levels of miR-202-3p in peripheral blood cells and found that miR-202-3p expression was significantly higher in CHD cases than in controls (P < 0.001). miR-202-3p levels were negatively correlated with platelet distribution width (r = −0.348, P = 0.002) and mean platelet volume (r = −0.29, P = 0.01). Further functional analyses suggested that stimulation with oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL) induced miR-202-3p expression, and that this microRNA suppressed the formation of ox-LDL-induced macrophage foam cells derived from THP-1 cells in a feedback manner. In addition, miR-202-3p overexpression modulated the expression of several key genes involved in foam cell formation, including that of ABCG4, NCEH1I, and SCARB2. In summary, miR-202-3p was associated with CHD, exerting a protective role against CHD by feedback suppression of ox-LDL-induced macrophage foam cell formation.

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Li, L., Wu, F., Xie, Y., Xu, W., Xiong, G., Xu, Y., … Jiang, X. (2020). MiR-202-3p inhibits foam cell formation and is associated with coronary heart disease risk in a Chinese population. International Heart Journal, 61(1), 153–159. https://doi.org/10.1536/ihj.19-033

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