International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2021)

Can miRNA Indicate Risk of Illness after Continuous Exposure to <i>M. tuberculosis</i>?

  • Cleonardo Augusto Silva,
  • Arthur Ribeiro-dos-Santos,
  • Wanderson Gonçalves Gonçalves,
  • Pablo Pinto,
  • Rafael Pompeu Pantoja,
  • Tatiana Vinasco-Sandoval,
  • André Maurício Ribeiro-dos-Santos,
  • Mara Helena Hutz,
  • Amanda Ferreira Vidal,
  • Gilderlanio Santana Araújo,
  • Ândrea Ribeiro-dos-Santos,
  • Sidney Santos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22073674
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 7
p. 3674

Abstract

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The role of regulatory elements such as small ncRNAs and their mechanisms are poorly understood in infectious diseases. Tuberculosis is one of the oldest infectious diseases of humans and it is still a challenge to prevent and treat. Control of the infection, as well as its diagnosis, are still complex and current treatments used are linked to several side effects. This study aimed to identify possible biomarkers for tuberculosis by applying NGS techniques to obtain global miRNA expression profiles from 22 blood samples of infected patients with tuberculosis (n = 9), their respective healthy physicians (n = 6) and external healthy individuals as controls (n = 7). Samples were run through a pipeline consisting of differential expression, target genes, gene set enrichment and miRNA–gene network analyses. We observed 153 altered miRNAs, among which only three DEmiRNAs (hsa-let-7g-5p, hsa-miR-486-3p and hsa-miR-4732-5p) were found between the investigated patients and their respective physicians. These DEmiRNAs are suggested to play an important role in granuloma regulation and their immune physiopathology. Our results indicate that miRNAs may be involved in immune modulation by regulating gene expression in cells of the immune system. Our findings encourage the application of miRNAs as potential biomarkers for tuberculosis.

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