A translational study of urine miRNAs in acute myocardial infarction

作者:Cheng Yunhui; Wang Xiaobin; Yang Jian; Duan Xiaoxia; Yao Yi; Shi Xiaoling; Chen Zhuang; Fan Zhongcai; Liu Xiaojun; Qin Shanshan; Tang Xiaojun; Zhang Chunxiang*
来源:Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 2012, 53(5): 668-676.
DOI:10.1016/j.yjmcc.2012.08.010

摘要

The currently used biomarkers for acute myocardial infarction (AM!) are blood creatinine phosphokinase-muscle band (CPK-MB), troponin-T (TnT), and troponin I (TnI). However, no good biomarkers are identified in urine after AM!, because these blood protein biomarkers are difficult to be filtered into urine. In this study, the role of urine microRNAs in the diagnosis of AMI and the mechanism involved were determined. We found that urine miR-1 was quickly increased in rats after AMI with peak at 24 h after AM!, in which an over 50-fold increase was demonstrated. At 7 days after AM!, the urine miR-1 level was returned to the basal level. No miR-208 was found in normal urine. In urine from rats with AM!, miR-208 was easily detected. To determine the mechanism involved, we determined the levels of heart-released miR-1 in the liver, spleen and kidney after AMI in rats and found that the kidney was an important metabolic organ. To determine the renal elimination of blood miRNAs, we isolated serum exosomes from rats after AMI and injected these exosomes into the circulating blood of normal rats. We found that the urine miR-1 was significantly increased in exosome-injected animals. Moreover, PKH67-labeled exosomes injected into circulating blood could enter into the kidney tissues and cells, as well as urine. Furthermore, the levels of urine miR-1 were significantly increased in patients with AMI. The results suggest that urine miRNAs such as miR-1 could be novel urine biomarkers for AMI.