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Genetic and hypoxic alterations of the microRNA-210-ISCU1/2 axis promote iron-sulfur deficiency and pulmonary hypertension.

Authors :
White, Kevin
White, Kevin
Lu, Yu
Annis, Sofia
Hale, Andrew E
Chau, B Nelson
Dahlman, James E
Hemann, Craig
Opotowsky, Alexander R
Vargas, Sara O
Rosas, Ivan
Perrella, Mark A
Osorio, Juan C
Haley, Kathleen J
Graham, Brian B
Kumar, Rahul
Saggar, Rajan
Saggar, Rajeev
Wallace, W Dean
Ross, David J
Khan, Omar F
Bader, Andrew
Gochuico, Bernadette R
Matar, Majed
Polach, Kevin
Johannessen, Nicolai M
Prosser, Haydn M
Anderson, Daniel G
Langer, Robert
Zweier, Jay L
Bindoff, Laurence A
Systrom, David
Waxman, Aaron B
Jin, Richard C
Chan, Stephen Y
White, Kevin
White, Kevin
Lu, Yu
Annis, Sofia
Hale, Andrew E
Chau, B Nelson
Dahlman, James E
Hemann, Craig
Opotowsky, Alexander R
Vargas, Sara O
Rosas, Ivan
Perrella, Mark A
Osorio, Juan C
Haley, Kathleen J
Graham, Brian B
Kumar, Rahul
Saggar, Rajan
Saggar, Rajeev
Wallace, W Dean
Ross, David J
Khan, Omar F
Bader, Andrew
Gochuico, Bernadette R
Matar, Majed
Polach, Kevin
Johannessen, Nicolai M
Prosser, Haydn M
Anderson, Daniel G
Langer, Robert
Zweier, Jay L
Bindoff, Laurence A
Systrom, David
Waxman, Aaron B
Jin, Richard C
Chan, Stephen Y
Source :
EMBO molecular medicine; vol 7, iss 6, 695-713; 1757-4676
Publication Year :
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.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EMBO molecular medicine; vol 7, iss 6, 695-713; 1757-4676
Notes :
application/pdf, EMBO molecular medicine vol 7, iss 6, 695-713 1757-4676
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367437965
Document Type :
Electronic Resource