Nature Communications (May 2019)

Circulating miR-103a-3p contributes to angiotensin II-induced renal inflammation and fibrosis via a SNRK/NF-κB/p65 regulatory axis

  • Qiulun Lu,
  • Zejun Ma,
  • Ye Ding,
  • Tatiana Bedarida,
  • Liming Chen,
  • Zhonglin Xie,
  • Ping Song,
  • Ming-Hui Zou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10116-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Angiotensin II is known to cause renal inflammation and fibrosis. Here Lu et al. show that levels of circulating miR-103a-3p are elevated in hypertensive nephropathy patients and in an animal model of angiotensin II-induced renal dysfunction, and that miR-103a-3p suppresses SNRK expression leading to the activation of the pro-inflammatory NF-κB pathway in glomerular endothelial cells.