Blood Science (Jul 2020)

Abnormal miR-214/A20 expression might play a role in T cell activation in patients with aplastic anemia

  • Zhi Yu,
  • Cunte Chen,
  • Yankai Xiao,
  • Xiaohui Chen,
  • Lixing Guo,
  • Guangxiao Tan,
  • Guixuan Huang,
  • Weifeng Luo,
  • Ming Zhou,
  • Yumiao Li,
  • Chen Lin,
  • Qi Shen,
  • Yuping Zhang,
  • Bo Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/BS9.0000000000000053
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 100 – 105

Abstract

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Abstract. Aberrant T cell activation is a major cause of aplastic anemia (AA) pathogenesis. Recent studies have shown that miRNAs regulate T cell activation and are involved in AA. A previous study found that miR-214 was significantly up-regulated upon T cell activation in a CD28-dependent fashion by targeting PTEN. However, the expression characteristics of miR-214 and its target genes in AA have not been defined. In this study, target genes for miR-214 were predicted and confirmed by bioinformatics and luciferase reporter assays. The expression levels of miR-214 and target genes were detected in 36 healthy individuals and 35 patients with AA in peripheral blood mononuclear cells by real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Bioinformatics and luciferase reporter assays identified that miR-214 could bind to the A20 3′ untranslated regions. Significantly increased miR-214 and the decreased A20 expression level were detected in the AA patients compared with the healthy group. In addition, significantly increased miR-214 was found in non-severe aplastic anemia compared with severe aplastic anemia patients. These results suggested that the A20 gene was a potential target of miR-214, and elevated miR-214 might medicate T cell activation at least in part by regulating A20 expression in AA. We firstly confirmed that miR-214 regulated A20 expression, and aberrant miR-214/A20 expression might contribute to immunopathology in AA. The miR-214 expression might be used as a potential biomarker that assisted in diagnosing AA severity.