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Genetic and hypoxic alterations of the micro <scp>RNA</scp> ‐210‐ <scp>ISCU</scp> 1/2 axis promote iron–sulfur deficiency and pulmonary hypertension

Authors :
Mark A. Perrella
David J. Ross
Ivan O. Rosas
Rajesh Kumar
Brian B. Graham
Kevin P. White
Daniel G. Anderson
Sara O. Vargas
Rajeev Saggar
Omar F. Khan
Kevin J. Polach
Alexander R. Opotowsky
Rajan Saggar
Aaron B. Waxman
Kathleen J. Haley
Stephen Y. Chan
Majed Matar
James E. Dahlman
Bernadette R. Gochuico
Andrew Bader
Richard C Jin
Sofia Annis
David M. Systrom
W. Dean Wallace
Nicolai M. Johannessen
Robert Langer
Jay L. Zweier
B. Nelson Chau
Laurence A. Bindoff
Andrew E. Hale
Juan C. Osorio
Haydn M. Prosser
Craig Hemann
Yu Lu
Institute for Medical Engineering and Science
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
Dahlman, James E.
Bader, Andrew
Anderson, Daniel Griffith
Langer, Robert
Source :
EMBO molecular medicine, vol 7, iss 6, Wiley Blackwell
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
EMBO, 2015.

Abstract

Iron–sulfur (Fe‐S) clusters are essential for mitochondrial metabolism, but their regulation in pulmonary hypertension (PH) remains enigmatic. We demonstrate that alterations of the miR‐210‐ISCU1/2 axis cause Fe‐S deficiencies in vivo and promote PH. In pulmonary vascular cells and particularly endothelium, hypoxic induction of miR‐210 and repression of the miR‐210 targets ISCU1/2 down‐regulated Fe‐S levels. In mouse and human vascular and endothelial tissue affected by PH, miR‐210 was elevated accompanied by decreased ISCU1/2 and Fe‐S integrity. In mice, miR‐210 repressed ISCU1/2 and promoted PH. Mice deficient in miR‐210, via genetic/pharmacologic means or via an endothelial‐specific manner, displayed increased ISCU1/2 and were resistant to Fe‐S‐dependent pathophenotypes and PH. Similar to hypoxia or miR‐210 overexpression, ISCU1/2 knockdown also promoted PH. Finally, cardiopulmonary exercise testing of a woman with homozygous ISCU mutations revealed exercise‐induced pulmonary vascular dysfunction. Thus, driven by acquired (hypoxia) or genetic causes, the miR‐210‐ISCU1/2 regulatory axis is a pathogenic lynchpin causing Fe‐S deficiency and PH. These findings carry broad translational implications for defining the metabolic origins of PH and potentially other metabolic diseases sharing similar underpinnings.&lt;br /&gt;National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (U54‐CA151884)&lt;br /&gt;National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (R01‐DE016516‐06)&lt;br /&gt;National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (EB000244)

Details

ISSN :
17574684 and 17574676
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....22a7eac69bbeee454e28b7e295367fd8