PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Identification of microRNAs with Dysregulated Expression in Status Epilepticus Induced Epileptogenesis.

  • Mykaella Andrade de Araújo,
  • Thalita Ewellyn Batista Sales Marques,
  • Shirley Octacílio-Silva,
  • Carmem Lúcia de Arroxelas-Silva,
  • Marília Gabriella Alves Goulart Pereira,
  • José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos,
  • Ludmyla Kandratavicius,
  • João Pereira Leite,
  • Norberto Garcia-Cairasco,
  • Olagide Wagner Castro,
  • Marcelo Duzzioni,
  • Geraldo Aleixo Passos,
  • Maria Luisa Paçó-Larson,
  • Daniel Leite Góes Gitaí

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0163855
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. e0163855

Abstract

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The involvement of miRNA in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) pathogenesis has increasingly become a focus of epigenetic studies. Despite advances, the number of known miRNAs with a consistent expression response during epileptogenesis is still small. Addressing this situation requires additional miRNA profiling studies coupled to detailed individual expression analyses. Here, we perform a miRNA microarray analysis of the hippocampus of Wistar rats 24 hours after intra-hippocampal pilocarpine-induced Status Epilepticus (H-PILO SE). We identified 73 miRNAs that undergo significant changes, of which 36 were up-regulated and 37 were down-regulated. To validate, we selected 5 of these (10a-5p, 128a-3p, 196b-5p, 352 and 324-3p) for RT-qPCR analysis. Our results confirmed that miR-352 and 196b-5p levels were significantly higher and miR-128a-3p levels were significantly lower in the hippocampus of H-PILO SE rats. We also evaluated whether the 3 miRNAs show a dysregulated hippocampal expression at three time periods (0h, 24h and chronic phase) after systemic pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (S-PILO SE). We demonstrate that miR-128a-3p transcripts are significantly reduced at all time points compared to the naïve group. Moreover, miR-196b-5p was significantly higher only at 24h post-SE, while miR-352 transcripts were significantly up-regulated after 24h and in chronic phase (epileptic) rats. Finally, when we compared hippocampi of epileptic and non-epileptic humans, we observed that transcript levels of miRNAs show similar trends to the animal models. In summary, we successfully identified two novel dysregulated miRNAs (196b-5p and 352) and confirmed miR-128a-3p downregulation in SE-induced epileptogenesis. Further functional assays are required to understand the role of these miRNAs in MTLE pathogenesis.