Molecular Metabolism (Feb 2024)

Programming of cardiac metabolism by miR-15b-5p, a miRNA released in cardiac extracellular vesicles following ischemia-reperfusion injury

  • Lucas C. Pantaleão,
  • Elena Loche,
  • Denise S. Fernandez-Twinn,
  • Laura Dearden,
  • Adriana Córdova-Casanova,
  • Clive Osmond,
  • Minna K. Salonen,
  • Eero Kajantie,
  • Youguo Niu,
  • Juliana de Almeida-Faria,
  • Benjamin D. Thackray,
  • Tuija M. Mikkola,
  • Dino A. Giussani,
  • Andrew J. Murray,
  • Martin Bushell,
  • Johan G. Eriksson,
  • Susan E. Ozanne

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 80
p. 101875

Abstract

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Objective: We investigated the potential involvement of miRNAs in the developmental programming of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) by maternal obesity. Methods: Serum miRNAs were measured in individuals from the Helsinki Birth Cohort (with known maternal body mass index), and a mouse model was used to determine causative effects of maternal obesity during pregnancy and ischemia-reperfusion on offspring cardiac miRNA expression and release. Results: miR-15b-5p levels were increased in the sera of males born to mothers with higher BMI and in the hearts of adult mice born to obese dams. In an ex-vivo model of perfused mouse hearts, we demonstrated that cardiac tissue releases miR-15b-5p, and that some of the released miR-15b-5p was contained within small extracellular vesicles (EVs). We also demonstrated that release was higher from hearts exposed to maternal obesity following ischaemia/reperfusion. Over-expression of miR-15b-5p in vitro led to loss of outer mitochondrial membrane stability and to repressed fatty acid oxidation in cardiomyocytes. Conclusions: These findings suggest that miR-15-b could play a mechanistic role in the dysregulation of cardiac metabolism following exposure to an in utero obesogenic environment and that its release in cardiac EVs following ischaemic damage may be a novel factor contributing to inter-organ communication between the programmed heart and peripheral tissues.

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