Review Article
MicroRNAs: Novel Regulators of the Heart
Junjie Xiao1,2,3, Yi-Han Chen1,2,3
1Key Laboratory of Arrhythmias, Ministry of Education, China (Tongji University), Shanghai 200065, China;
2Department of Cardiology, Tongji Hospital, Tongji University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200065, China;
3Institute of Medical Genetics, Tongji University, Shanghai 200065, China
Corresponding to: Yi-Han Chen, MD, Professor. Key Laboratory of Arrhythmias,
Ministry of Education, China (Tongji University), 389 Xin Cun Road, Shanghai 200065,
China. Tel.: 0086-21-65989086; Fax: 0086-21-56370868. E-mail: yihanchen@hotmail.com, or
yihanchen@tongji.edu.cn.
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Abstract
MicroRNAs are approximately 22 nucleotides in length, and they play central roles in the regulation of gene expression. MicroRNAs participate
in many essential biological processes, such as cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis and stress. Emerging evidence has indicated
that microRNAs are novel regulators involved in cardiac physiology and pathophysiology, including the regulation of cardiac physiological
function and participation in the genesis of cardiac diseases. Although several challenges remain, microRNAs might have a promising diagnostic
and therapeutic potential in cardiac diseases.
Key words
MicroRNAs; cardiac pathophysiology; cardiac disease; diagnosis; treatment.
J Thorac Dis 2010;2:43-47. DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2010.02.01.010
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MicroRNAs are endogenous single-stranded non-coding RNAs
consisting of approximately 22 nucleotides. These small RNAs
regulate target gene expression by base pairing with specific binding
sites located in the 3' untranslated region of target mRNAs ( 1, 2). As negative regulators of targeted gene expression, microRNAs
inhibit mRNA translation and promote mRNA degradation ( 3, 4).
However, microRNAs can also up-regulate gene expression, likely
via the suppression of transcriptional repressors ( 3, 5). Intriguingly,
individual microRNAs can target multiple genes, and a single gene
can be regulated by several microRNAs ( 6, 7). Being the central
players in gene expression regulation, microRNAs participate in
many essential biological processes, such as cell proliferation, differentiation,
apoptosis and stress ( 8, 9).
Thus far, at least 700 human and 500 mouse microRNAs have
been catalogued in the miRBase online database ( http://microrna.
sanger.ac.uk) ( 8, 10). Among these microRNAs, there are many
that are enriched in a tissue- or cell-specific manner ( 11, 12). MicroRNA-
1, microRNA-133 and microRNA-208 are muscle specific
and are primarily expressed in cardiac and skeletal muscles ( 13).
The microRNA-1 family, representing over 40% of all microRNAs
expressed in the heart, consists of the microRNA-1 subfamily (microRNA-
1-1 and microRNA-1-2) and microRNA-206 ( 14). The
microRNA-133 family consists of microRNA-133a-1, microRNA-133a-2 and microRNA-133b ( 14). The microRNA-208 family,
microRNAs unique to the heart, is composed of microRNA-208a
and microRNA-208b, the sequences of which are located within
the cardiac-restricted α- and β-myosin heavy chain (MHC) genes,
respectively ( 13, 15). Emerging evidence has indicated that microRNAs
are novel regulators of cardiac pathophysiology ( 13, 16).
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MicroRNAs and cardiac physiology
Dicer and microRNAs
Dicer is the only known essential enzyme for the maturation of
microRNAs ( 17, 18). In zebrafish, maternal-zygotic Dicer mutants
display abnormal morphogenesis during gastrulation, brain formation,
heart development and somitogenesis ( 16). A cardiac-specific
knockout of Dicer, using -MHC promoter-driven Cre-recombinase,
does not affect the specification or patterning of the heart but
leads to progressive dilated cardiomyopathy, heart failure and postnatal
lethality ( 19). Therefore, it is speculated that Dicer and microRNAs
are essential for cardiac development and function.
MicroRNAs and cardiac development
The heart is one of the first organs to function in a developing
embryo ( 8). Currently, although our understanding of microRNA
function in embryogenesis is rudimentary, the emerging role of the
biogenesis and activity of microRNAs as key regulatory mechanisms
in controlling developmental timing, tissue differentiation,
and maintenance of tissue identity during embryogenesis has been
revealed ( 20-22).
MicroRNA-1 plays a major role in cardiac development.
Hand2, a transcription factor controlling the proliferation of cardiac myocytes, is one target of microRNA-1 during cardiac development.
During development, microRNA-1 levels increase, causing
Hand2 protein levels to decrease, eventually reaching the levels
found in mature cardiac myocytes. Excess microRNA-1 expression
during the development period causes a reduced pool of proliferating
ventricular myocytes. In short, microRNA-1 controls the balance
between proliferation and differentiation during cardiogenesis
via targeting critical cardiac regulatory proteins ( 23). Histone
deacetylase 4 (HDAC4) down-regulates the expression of GATA4
and Nkx2.5 in P19 embryonic carcinoma stem cells, thereby inhibiting
cardiomyogenesis. MicroRNA-1 can promote myogenesis
by targeting another target, HDAC4 ( 5).
Similar to microRNA-1, microRNA-133 also plays roles in cardiac
development, especially the development of the atrioventricular
canal. MicroRNA-133 deletion results in severe cardiac malformations
together with embryonic and postnatal lethality due to the
insufficient number of cardioblasts ( 16).
However, the pivotal roles of the microRNA unique to the
heart, microRNA-208, remain unknown. Additionally, the requirement
for microRNAs at different developmental time points should
also be explored using knockout or conditional-knockout strains
( 17).
MicroRNAs and cardiac ion channels
MicroRNAs can regulate cardiac ion channel genes, including
GJA1 (which encodes connexin 43), CACNB2 (dihydropyridine-
sensitive L-type calcium channel β 2 subunit), KCNJ3 (Kir3.
1 or GIRK1, a subunit of ACh-sensitive K + channel), SCN5A (encoding
cardiac Na + channel α-subunit), KCNJ2 (encoding Kir2.1, a
pore-forming -subunit of the inward rectifier K + channel) and KCNAB1
(β1-subunit of Shaker-type voltage-gated K + channels). Interestingly,
the distribution of microRNA-133 and microRNA-1
transcripts within the heart is spatially heterogeneous, with the patterns
corresponding to the spatial distribution of the KCNQ1 and
KCNE1 proteins and of I Ks ( 14).
MicroRNAs and cardiac mitochondrial function
Mitochondria are highly abundant and constitute approximately
40% of the total volume of cardiac myocytes in the heart ( 24). Mitochondria
in the heart play two roles essential for cell survival:
ATP synthesis and maintenance of Ca 2+ homeostasis. Adenine nucleotide
transporter (ANT) plays a central role in mitochondrial oxidative
phosphorylation via exchanging matrix ATP for cytosolic
ADP across the mitochondrial inner membrane. ADP-ribosylation
factor-like 2 (Arl2) colocalizes with ANT1, forming a complex
with an Arl2-specific effector named Binder of Arl2. The interaction
between Arl2 and ANT1 can regulate cellular ATP levels. MicroRNA-
15b, microRNA-16, microRNA-195 and microRNA-424,
all of which have the same seed sequence―the most critical determinant
of miRNA targeting―can specifically down-regulate Arl2 and decrease cellular ATP levels, indicating that microRNAs can
affect the ATP synthesis in mitochondria ( 24). However, whether
microRNAs can affect mitochondrial Ca 2+ homeostasis remains unknown.
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MicroRNAs and cardiac diseases
MicroRNAs and myocardial hypertrophy
MicroRNA-133 and microRNA-1 have been found to be
down-regulated in three different animal models of cardiac hypertrophy,
including pressure overload-induced hypertrophy, Akt
overexpression-induced hypertrophy, and adaptive cardiac hypertrophy.
RhoA is a GDP-GTP exchange protein that regulates hypertrophy,
whereas Cdc42 is a signal transduction kinase implicated
in cardiac hypertrophy. These proteins are responsible for the
rearrangements of cytoskeletal and myofibrillar proteins during
cardiac hypertrophy. Nelf-A/WHSC2 is a nuclear factor involved
in cardiogenesis; however, its exact role in hypertrophy remains
unclear. MicroRNA-133 controls cardiac hypertrophy by targeting
RhoA, Cdc42 and Nelf-A/WHSC2 ( 25). MicroRNA-1 regulates the
growth responses of cardiac myocytes by negatively regulating the
calcium signaling components calmodulin, Mef2a and Gata4,
which are key transcription factors that mediate Ca 2+-dependent
changes in gene expression ( 26).
The expression of microRNA-195 is up-regulated in hypertrophic
human hearts. The role of microRNA-195 in promoting
cardiac growth is in contrast with that of microRNA-1, a muscle-
specific microRNA that inhibits cardiac growth by suppressing
the expres sion of Hand2. Although microRNA-1 is highly expressed
in the heart, microRNA-195 is obviously able to override
its inhibitory influence on cardiac growth. Cardiac-specific overexpression
of microRNA-195 results in dilated cardiomyopathy and
heart failure in mice as early as two weeks of age, implying that the
up-regulation of microRNA-195 during cardiac hypertrophy actively
contributes to the disease process ( 27).
MicroRNA-1, microRNA-133, microRNA-29, microRNA-30
and microRNA-150 are often down-regulated during myocardial
hypertrophy, whereas microRNA-21, microRNA-23a, microRNA-
125, microRNA-195 and microRNA-199 are up-regulated ( 3, 28). The forced expression of any one of the above up-regulated
miRNAs is sometimes sufficient to induce hypertrophy in cultured
cardiac myocytes, whereas inhibition of one of the down-regulated
microRNAs can blunt the increase in cardiac myocyte size ( 29).
MicroRNAs and heart failure
A shift toward a fetal microRNA profile seems to be an important
basis of part of the modification of the cardiac transcriptome
that occurs with heart failure ( 30, 31). Thum et al. revealed that 67
microRNAs were up-regulated by over 1.5-fold in failing human
left ventricles versus normal human hearts, whereas 43 microRNAs were down-regulated by over 1.5-fold, as shown by microRNA microarray
analysis. The microRNAs up-regulated in a failing heart
contain binding sites mainly for the down-regulated mRNAs and
vice versa ( 30). In addition, Ikeda et al. also showed divergent microRNA
expression patterns, which pointed to microRNAs as ac
tive participants in the disease processes of heart failure ( 32).
Dgcr8 is a gene required for microRNA biogenesis. Normally, the
levels of Myh7 (a fetal myosin) and Tnni (a slow skeletal muscle
specific troponin-complex subunit) are down-regulated in the
heart after birth. Cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of dgcr8 revealed
a phenotype of heart failure. The drastic loss of cardiac function is
due to the continuous expression of Myh7 and Tnni in the failing
heart ( 31).
MicroRNAs and myocardial infarction
Myocardial infarction in mice and humans results in the dysregulation
of specific microRNAs that are distinct from those involved
in hypertrophy and heart failure ( 33, 34). The microRNA-29 family,
targeting a cadre of mRNAs that encode proteins involved in fibrosis,
comprises the myocardial infarction-regulated microRNAs.
The microRNA-29 family is down-regulated in the region of the
heart adjacent to the infarct, and this down-regulation is responsible
for the induction of collagens and additional extracellular matrix
genes that contribute to cardiac fibrosis in response to myocardial
infarction ( 34).
MicroRNAs and cardiac ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury
Ren XP et al. detected the expression pattern of microRNAs in
murine hearts subjected to I/R and found that only miR-320 expression
was significantly decreased. Overexpression of microRNA-
320 in cardiac myocytes results in increased sensitivity to I/R
injury, whereas knock-down of endogenous microRNA-320 is cytoprotective
via antithetical regulation of Hsp20 ( 35). Another
study found that I/R rapidly elevated microRNA-21 levels in the
heart. I/R-induced microRNA-21 limits phosphatase and tensin homologue
function and, therefore, causes activation of the Akt pathway
and increases matrix metalloprotease-2 expression in cardiac
fibroblasts of the infarct region of the I/R heart ( 16).
MicroRNAs and arrhythmia
Ventricular arrhythmias, a major public health problem, are
common events leading to sudden death. MicroRNA-1 overexpression
exacerbates arrhythmogenesis via direct repression of KCNJ2
and GJA1 ( 36). KCNJ2 encodes Kir2.1, the main K + channel subunit
responsible for regulating the resting cardiac membrane potential
( 37). GJA1 encodes connexin 43, the main cardiac gap junction
channel responsible for intercellular conductance in the ventricle
( 38). In addition, a recent study found that miR-1 enhances cardiac
excitation-contraction coupling by selectively increasing phosphorylation of the L-type Ca 2+ channels and ryanodine receptors
(RyR2) by disrupting the localization of the protein phosphatase
PP2A to these channels. Through translational inhibition of the
PP2A regulatory subunit B56, miR-1 causes CaMKII-dependent
hyperphosphorylation of RyR2, enhances RyR2 activity, and promotes
arrhythmogenic sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ release ( 39).
However, down-regulation of microRNA-1 and microRNA-133 in
hypertrophied rat hearts has been shown to be associated with arrhythmias
via the pacemaker channel genes HCN2 and HCN4, respectively
( 40). Additionally, microRNA-1-2 knockout mice that
survive until birth have a high incidence of electrophysiological abnormalities
that often result in sudden death by repressing KCND2,
a potassium channel subunit involved in the transient outward K +
current ( 41).
Atrial fibrillation (AF), the most prevalent arrhythmia, displays
an age-dependent prevalence that exceeds 10% in elderly populations,
affecting more than 5 million people worldwide. MicroRNA-1 levels have been found to be greatly reduced during human
AF, possibly contributing to the up-regulation of Kir2.1 subunits
and leading to increased I K1 ( 42). Another study found that the expression
of microRNA-328 was up-regulated in a rat model and in
human tissues with AF, which might cause AF by decreasing the
expression of caveolin-3. Caveolin-3 is muscle specific and participates
in regulating many ion channels in the heart ( 43).
MicroRNAs and congenital heart defects
The heart is more susceptible to congenital defects than any other
organ ( 29). When microRNA-133a-1 or microRNA-133a-2 is
individually deleted in mice, no obvious cardiac abnormalities in
either morphology or function occur. However, combined targeted
deletion of microRNA-133a-1 and microRNA-133a-2 can result in
severe cardiac malformations, including ventricular septal defects.
Additionally, the targeted deletion of microRNA-1-2 in mice results
in 50% lethality, largely attributed to ventricular septal defects
(VSDs). VSDs result from the dysregulation of myriad events during
cardiogenesis, and it is likely that microRNA-1-2 regulates numerous
genes, including Hand2, during the genesis of VSDs ( 41).
Moreover, mice deficient in microRNA-17-92 die shortly after
birth because of lung hypoplasia and ventricular septal defects via
targeting Bim. Bim belongs to the BH3-only family of proapoptotic
genes, and its overexpression leads to apoptosis ( 44). However,
whether and which microRNAs actively contribute to congenital
heart defects in humans remain unknown.
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Potential applications of microRNAs in clinical practice
Diagnostic potential of microRNAs
MicroRNA expression profiles are highly accurate for the prediction
of outcomes in cancer. Serum microRNAs have been found
to be good diagnostic markers for cancer ( 45). An increasingly important question is whether microRNAs can function as diagnostic
indicators in cardiac diseases.
Distinctive signature patterns of miRNA expression exist within
different cardiac disease states, making new diagnostics possible
( 32). Moreover, the huge potential of serum microRNAs to diagnose
cardiac diseases, in particular, presymptomatic screening of
complications of hypertensive heart disease and heart failure, is also
obvious.
In the plasma of healthy people, microRNA-1 and microRNA-
133 are present in low abundance, and microRNA-208a is absent
( 46). Circulating microRNA-1 may be a novel, independent
biomarker for the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI).
Compared with non-AMI patients, the plasma level of microRNA-1 in AMI is significantly higher and drops to normal on discharge
following medication. The area under the ROC curve, a
predictive method for AMI, is 0.7740 for the separation between
non-AMI and AMI patients and 0.8522 for the separation between
AMI patients that are hospitalized and those that can be discharged.
However, the microRNA-133 level in the plasma between
AMI and non-AMI subjects is not different ( 47). MicroRNA-208a
also reveals a high sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing AMI.
In AMI rats, microRNA-208a is undetected in the plasma at 0 h but
is significantly increased to a detectable level within 1 h after coronary
artery occlusion. Although microRNA-208a is undetectable in
non-AMI patients, it can be easily detected in 90.9% of AMI patients
and in 100% of AMI patients within 4 h of the onset of
symptoms ( 47).
Therapeutic potential of microRNAs
As the changes in microRNA expression play important roles in
the genesis of cardiac diseases, microRNA-based therapeutics may
have promising potential.
Individual microRNA inhibition can be achieved by antisense
microRNA oligonucleotides (AMOs), which are fully complementary
to target microRNAs. The silencing of miRNAs using antagomirs
is dose-dependent and long lasting, being detectable for
as long as 23 days after injection ( 48). Moreover, AMOs cannot
cross the blood-placental barrier, making them feasible for use
even in pregnant women ( 49). A microRNA family can be inhibited
by microRNA sponges via the introduction into the 3'UTR of a
reporter gene of a series of arrayed binding sites for a specific seed
in tandem ( 50).
The action of mature endogenous microRNAs can be mimicked
with synthetic double-stranded RNA ( 3). For example, the administration
of a microRNA mimic of microRNA-29 is capable of
blunting fibrosis during hypertrophy and after myocardial infarction
by targeting collagen I, II, and the gene translation ( 33).
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Perspectives
Thus far, microRNA expression profiles for human cardiac diseases are mainly for heart failure ( 6). More microRNA expression
studies with myocardial specimens from patients with different cardiac
diseases are required, including studies that focus on the effects
of the underlying etiology and the effects of treatment, age,
gender, and other potential regulators ( 5). More importantly, the
present collection of microRNAs implicated in cardiac diseases is
likely to be incomplete as new microRNAs are being continuously
discovered ( 41).
Although microRNAs have a promising diagnostic and therapeutic
potential in cardiac diseases, several challenges remain.
First, as gene therapy, modes of delivery, specificity, potential toxicity,
reversibility and regulation of microRNA modulators are
problems faced in this field. Additionally, the broad and poorly understood
consequences of modulating microRNA function also
pose challenges with respect to specificity and possible off-target
effects ( 1). Second, the therapeutic window for any microRNA-directed
therapeutic may be narrow. As microRNAs have numerous
molecular targets, the modulation of one microRNA may perturb
multiple cellular functions ( 6). Some of the perturbations are beneficial,
while others are pathological. For example, strategies to
up-regulate microRNA-133 levels in vivo might serve as a therapy
for preventing pathological cardiac growth. However, microRNA-
133 overexpression causes abnormalities in cardiac electrical
activity ( 1). As another example, overexpression of microRNA-1
can be used to treat cardiac hypertrophy. However, similar to the
case with miR-133a, increased levels of microRNA-1 are also accompanied
by electrophysiological abnormalities ( 8).
In conclusion, what we have learned about microRNAs to date
is just the tip of the iceberg. However, rarely has an opportunity
arisen to advance such new biology for the diagnosis and treatment
of cardiac diseases.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Chinese "973" Program Fund
(2007CB512100), the Chinese "863" Program Fund
(2007AA02Z438), the Program Fund for Shanghai Subject Chief
Scientists, the Program Fund for Innovative Research Teams from
the Chinese Ministry of Education, and the Chinese National Science
Fund (30425016 and 30330290) (all of the grants were to Dr
Yi-Han Chen).
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Cite this article as: Xiao JJ, Chen YH. MicroRNAs: Novel Regulators of the Heart. J Thorac Dis 2010;2:43-47. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2010.02.01.010
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