PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Relations between plasma microRNAs, echocardiographic markers of atrial remodeling, and atrial fibrillation: Data from the Framingham Offspring study.

  • Aditya Vaze,
  • Khanh-Van Tran,
  • Kahraman Tanriverdi,
  • Mayank Sardana,
  • Darleen Lessard,
  • J Kevin Donahue,
  • Bruce Barton,
  • Gerard Aurigemma,
  • Steven A Lubitz,
  • Honghuang Lin,
  • George H Nasr,
  • Amiya Mandapati,
  • Emelia J Benjamin,
  • Ramachandran S Vasan,
  • Jane E Freedman,
  • David D McManus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236960
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. e0236960

Abstract

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BackgroundCirculating microRNAs may reflect or influence pathological cardiac remodeling and contribute to atrial fibrillation (AF).ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to identify candidate plasma microRNAs that are associated with echocardiographic phenotypes of atrial remodeling, and incident and prevalent AF in a community-based cohort.MethodsWe analyzed left atrial function index (LAFI) of 1788 Framingham Offspring 8 participants. We quantified expression of 339 plasma microRNAs. We examined associations between microRNA levels with LAFI and prevalent and incident AF. We constructed pathway analysis of microRNAs' predicted gene targets to identify molecular processes involved in adverse atrial remodeling in AF.ResultsThe mean age of the participants was 66 ± 9 years, and 54% were women. Five percent of participants had prevalent AF at the initial examination and 9% (n = 157) developed AF over a median 8.6 years of follow-up (IQR 8.1-9.2 years). Plasma microRNAs were associated with LAFI (N = 73, pConclusionsCirculating microRNAs 106b, 26a-5p, 484, 20a-5p are associated with atrial remodeling and AF.