Scientific Reports (Sep 2024)

Inhibition of miR-194-5p avoids DUSP9 downregulation thus limiting sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy

  • Jie Wang,
  • Ting Wei,
  • Wei Zhang,
  • Yi Chu,
  • Dongwei Zhang,
  • Mingming Zhang,
  • Jianqiang Hu,
  • Zhaole Ji,
  • Qimeng Hao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-71166-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy (SIC) is described as a reversible myocardial depression that occurs in patients with septic shock. Increasing evidence shows that microRNA-194-5p (miR-194-5p) participates in the regulation of oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and apoptosis and its expression is associated with the occurrence and progression of cardiovascular disease; however, the effects of miR-194-5p in SIC are still unclear. This study explores whether miR-194-5p could modulate SIC by affecting oxidative stress, mitochondrial function, and apoptosis. Experimental septic mice were induced by intraperitoneal injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in C57BL/6J mice. The biological role of miR-194-5p in SIC in vivo was investigated using cardiac echocardiography, ELISA, western blot, qRT-PCR, transmission electron microscopy, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) assay, bioinformatics analysis, and dual-luciferase reporter gene assay. Our major finding is that miR-194-5p antagomir mitigates sepsis-induced cardiac dysfunction, inflammation, oxidative stress, apoptosis and mitochondrial dysfunction in the hearts of septic mice, while miR-194-5p agomir triggers the opposite effects. Furthermore, dual-specificity phosphatase 9 (DUSP9) is a direct target of miR-194-5p and the cardioprotective effects of miR-194-5p antagomir on cardiac dysfunction, inflammation, apoptosis, mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress are abolished through inhibiting DUSP9. Therefore, miR-194-5p inhibition could mitigate SIC via DUSP9 in vivo and the novel miR-194-5p/DUSP9 axis might be the potential treatment targets for SIC patients.

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