Food Frontiers (Dec 2020)

Acrylamide alters the miRNA profiles and miR‐27a‐5p plays the key role in multiple tissues of rats

  • Dong Li,
  • Zhang Lujia,
  • Yang Liuqing,
  • Luo Yinghua,
  • Hu Xiaosong,
  • Chen Fang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/fft2.57
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 4
pp. 493 – 501

Abstract

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Abstract Acrylamide (AA) is the potential carcinogen, which can induce multiple toxic effects in laboratory animals and humans. So far, increasing attention have been paid to toxical mechanism and intervention measures of AA, however, these details and methods are still obscure. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been demonstrated to be involved in toxical functional mechanisms induced by chemicals in vivo or vitro. To explore novel target and mechanism of AA toxicity, a more detailed miRNA expression profiling study is needed. In this study, we established the short‐term high‐dose model of rats with the treatment of 35 mg/kg·b.w./day AA for 17 days, analyzed the miRNAs expression profiling in AA and control groups, and discovered the altered miRNA profiles in 11 tissues with AA treatment. Interestingly enough, the expression of miR‐27a‐5p were significantly up‐regulated in AA group, especially in bladder and hepar. Furthermore, we found miR‐27a‐5p increased in 11 tissues of long‐term low‐dose AA‐treated rats (3.5 mg/kg·b.w./day for 68 days). Therefore, these results revealed that AA changed miRNAs profiles in multiple tissues of SD rats for the first time and suggested that miR‐27a‐5p could be used as the target biomarker for the detection and interference of AA toxicity.

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