Nutrients (Nov 2018)

Hyperglycemia Affects miRNAs Expression Pattern during Adipogenesis of Human Visceral Adipocytes—Is Memorization Involved?

  • Justyna Strycharz,
  • Ewa Świderska,
  • Adam Wróblewski,
  • Marta Podolska,
  • Piotr Czarny,
  • Janusz Szemraj,
  • Aneta Balcerczyk,
  • Józef Drzewoski,
  • Jacek Kasznicki,
  • Agnieszka Śliwińska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10111774
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 1774

Abstract

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microRNAs are increasingly analyzed in adipogenesis, whose deregulation, especially visceral, contributes to the development of diabetes. Hyperglycemia is known to affect cells while occurring acutely and chronically. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the effect of hyperglycemia on human visceral pre/adipocytes from the perspective of microRNAs. The relative expression of 78 microRNAs was determined by TaqMan Low Density Arrays at three stages of HPA-v adipogenesis conducted under normoglycemia, chronic, and intermittent hyperglycemia (30 mM). Hierarchical clustering/Pearson correlation revealed the relationship between various microRNAs’ expression profiles, while functional analysis identified the genes and signaling pathways regulated by differentially expressed microRNAs. Hyperglycemia affected microRNAs’ expression patterns during adipogenesis, and at the stage of pre-adipocytes, differentiated and matured adipocytes compared to normoglycemia. Interestingly, the changes that were evoked upon hyperglycemic exposure during one adipogenesis stage resembled those observed upon chronic hyperglycemia. At least 15 microRNAs were modulated during normoglycemic and/or hyperglycemic adipogenesis and/or upon intermittent/chronic hyperglycemia. Bioinformatics analysis revealed the involvement of these microRNAs in cell cycles, lipid metabolism, ECM–receptor interaction, oxidative stress, signaling of insulin, MAPK, TGF-β, p53, and more. The obtained data suggests that visceral pre/adipocytes exposed to chronic/intermittent hyperglycemia develop a microRNAs’ expression pattern, which may contribute to further visceral dysfunction, the progression of diabetic phenotype, and diabetic complications possibly involving “epi”-memory.

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