Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Dec 2021)

A novel approach to identify the mechanism of miR-145-5p toxicity to podocytes based on the essential genes targeting analysis

  • Sipan Zhang,
  • Junnan Wu,
  • Xiaodong Zhu,
  • Hui Song,
  • Lu Ren,
  • Qiaoli Tang,
  • Xiaodong Xu,
  • Chunbei Liu,
  • Jiong Zhang,
  • Weixin Hu,
  • Zhihong Liu,
  • Shaolin Shi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
pp. 749 – 759

Abstract

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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are emerging as effective therapeutic agents. When testing whether miR-145-5p could alleviate kidney injury, we unexpectedly found that extracellular vesicles loaded with miR-145-5p induced proteinuria and podocyte foot process effacement in normal control mice. To explore the mechanism of miR-145-5p’s toxicity to podocytes, we hypothesized that miR-145-5p could enter podocytes and inhibit genes essential for podocytes. We demonstrated that systemically administered miRNA can enter podocytes. Next, we predicted 611 podocyte essential genes based on single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) and found that 32 of them are predicted to be targeted by miR-145-5p. Functional annotation of the 32 podocyte essential genes revealed small GTPase-mediated signal transduction as the top pathway. We experimentally validated that miR-145-5p targeted Arhgap24 and Srgap1, the essential regulators of the Rho family of small GTPases, increased the activity of Rac1 and Cdc42, and reduced RhoA activity, accompanied by cellular injury, in podocytes. These results explain how miR-145-5p has deleterious effect on podocytes. Most importantly, our study provides a novel approach to investigate how a miRNA affects a given cell type, allowing not only identification of the molecular mechanism underlying an observed side effect of a miRNA drug but also prediction of miRNA drug toxicity on various cell types.

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