EBioMedicine (Jun 2018)

Plasma Circulating Extracellular RNAs in Left Ventricular Remodeling Post-Myocardial Infarction

  • Kirsty M. Danielson,
  • Ravi Shah,
  • Ashish Yeri,
  • Xiaojun Liu,
  • Fernando Camacho Garcia,
  • Michael Silverman,
  • Kahraman Tanriverdi,
  • Avash Das,
  • Chunyang Xiao,
  • Michael Jerosch-Herold,
  • Bobak Heydari,
  • Siddique Abbasi,
  • Kendall Van Keuren-Jensen,
  • Jane E. Freedman,
  • Yaoyu E. Wang,
  • Anthony Rosenzweig,
  • Raymond Y. Kwong,
  • Saumya Das

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32
pp. 172 – 181

Abstract

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Despite substantial declines in mortality following myocardial infarction (MI), subsequent left ventricular remodeling (LVRm) remains a significant long-term complication. Extracellular small non-coding RNAs (exRNAs) have been associated with cardiac inflammation and fibrosis and we hypothesized that they are associated with post-MI LVRm phenotypes. RNA sequencing of exRNAs was performed on plasma samples from patients with “beneficial” (decrease LVESVI ≥ 20%, n = 11) and “adverse” (increase LVESVI ≥ 15%, n = 11) LVRm. Selected differentially expressed exRNAs were validated by RT-qPCR (n = 331) and analyzed for their association with LVRm determined by cardiac MRI. Principal components of exRNAs were associated with LVRm phenotypes post-MI; specifically, LV mass, LV ejection fraction, LV end systolic volume index, and fibrosis. We then investigated the temporal regulation and cellular origin of exRNAs in murine and cell models and found that: 1) plasma and tissue miRNA expression was temporally regulated; 2) the majority of the miRNAs were increased acutely in tissue and at sub-acute or chronic time-points in plasma; 3) miRNA expression was cell-specific; and 4) cardiomyocytes release a subset of the identified miRNAs packaged in exosomes into culture media in response to hypoxia/reoxygenation. In conclusion, we find that plasma exRNAs are temporally regulated and are associated with measures of post-MI LVRm. Keywords: Left ventricular remodeling, Myocardial infarction, microRNA, Extracellular RNA, Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, RNA sequencing, And inflammation