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Cellular and extracellular miRNAs are blood-compartment-specific diagnostic targets in sepsis

Authors :
Marlene Reithmair
Martina Pfob
Gustav Schelling
Benedikt Kirchner
Melanie Märte
Dominik Buschmann
Ortrud K. Steinlein
Michael W. Pfaffl
Alexander Choukèr
Ines Kaufmann
Daniel Hagl
Source :
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Wiley, 2017.

Abstract

Septic shock is a common medical condition with a mortality approaching 50% where early diagnosis and treatment are of particular importance for patient survival. Novel biomarkers that serve as prompt indicators of sepsis are urgently needed. High‐throughput technologies assessing circulating microRNAs represent an important tool for biomarker identification, but the blood‐compartment specificity of these miRNAs has not yet been investigated. We characterized miRNA profiles from serum exosomes, total serum and blood cells (leukocytes, erythrocytes, platelets) of sepsis patients by next‐generation sequencing and RT‐qPCR (n = 3 × 22) and established differences in miRNA expression between blood compartments. In silico analysis was used to identify compartment‐specific signalling functions of differentially regulated miRNAs in sepsis‐relevant pathways. In septic shock, a total of 77 and 103 miRNAs were down‐ and up‐regulated, respectively. A majority of these regulated miRNAs (14 in serum, 32 in exosomes and 73 in blood cells) had not been previously associated with sepsis. We found a distinctly compartment‐specific regulation of miRNAs between sepsis patients and healthy volunteers. Blood cellular miR‐199b‐5p was identified as a potential early indicator for sepsis and septic shock. miR‐125b‐5p and miR‐26b‐5p were uniquely regulated in exosomes and serum, respectively, while one miRNA (miR‐27b‐3p) was present in all three compartments. The expression of sepsis‐associated miRNAs is compartment‐specific. Exosome‐derived miRNAs contribute significant information regarding sepsis diagnosis and survival prediction and could serve as newly identified targets for the development of novel sepsis biomarkers.

Details

ISSN :
15821838
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5306eea7bf71100a54767602d5e93f1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.13162