Zhou Zhang, Brian Thomas Joyce, Jacob K Kresovich, Yinan Zheng, Jia Zhong, Ruchi Patel, Wei Zhang, Lei Liu, Chang Dou, John P McCracken, Anaité Díaz, Valeria Motta, Marco Sanchez-Guerra, Shurui Bian, Pier Alberto Bertazzi, Joel Schwartz, Andrea A Baccarelli, Sheng Wang, and Lifang Hou
BACKGROUND:Blood pressure (BP) is a complex, multifactorial clinical outcome driven by genetic susceptibility, behavioral choices, and environmental factors. Many molecular mechanisms have been proposed for the pathophysiology of high BP even as its prevalence continues to grow worldwide, increasing morbidity and marking it as a major public health concern. To address this, we evaluated miRNA profiling in blood leukocytes as potential biomarkers of BP and BP-related risk factors. METHODS:The Beijing Truck Driver Air Pollution Study included 60 truck drivers and 60 office workers examined in 2008. On two days separated by 1-2 weeks, we examined three BP measures: systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressure measured at both pre- and post-work exams for blood NanoString nCounter miRNA profiles. We used covariate-adjusted linear mixed-effect models to examine associations between BP and increased miRNA expression in both pooled and risk factor-stratified analyses. RESULTS:Overall 43 miRNAs were associated with pre-work BP (FDR