Therapies targeted at non-coding rnas in prevention and limitation of myocardial infarction and subsequent cardiac remodeling—current experience and perspectives

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Abstract

Myocardial infarction is one of the major causes of mortality worldwide and is a main cause of heart failure. This disease appears as a final point of atherosclerotic plaque progression, destabilization, and rupture. As a consequence of cardiomyocytes death during the infarction, the heart undergoes unfavorable cardiac remodeling, which results in its failure. Therefore, therapies aimed to limit the processes of atherosclerotic plaque progression, cardiac damage during the in-farction, and subsequent remodeling are urgently warranted. A hopeful therapeutic option for the future medicine is targeting and regulating non-coding RNA (ncRNA), like microRNA, circular RNA (circRNA), or long non-coding RNA (lncRNA). In this review, the approaches targeted at ncRNAs participating in the aforementioned pathophysiological processes involved in myocardial infarction and their outcomes in preclinical studies have been concisely presented.

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Kowara, M., Borodzicz-Jazdzyk, S., Rybak, K., Kubik, M., & Cudnoch-Jedrzejewska, A. (2021, June 1). Therapies targeted at non-coding rnas in prevention and limitation of myocardial infarction and subsequent cardiac remodeling—current experience and perspectives. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22115718

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