Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)
MicroRNA-98 negatively regulates myocardial infarction-induced apoptosis by down-regulating Fas and caspase-3
Abstract
Abstract Acute myocardial infarction (MI) is the leading cause of sudden death worldwide. MicroRNAs (miRs) is a novel class of regulators of cardiovascular diseases such as MI. This study aimed to explore the role of miR-98 in MI and its underlying mechanisms. We found that miR-98 was downregulated both in infarcted and ischemic myocardium of MI mice as well as H2O2-treated neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVCs). miR-98 overexpression remarkably increased cell viability and inhibited apoptosis of H2O2-treated NRVCs. Meanwhile, overexpression of miR-98 reversed H2O2-induced Bcl-2 downregulation and Bax elevation and significantly reduced JC-1 monomeric cells. Meanwhile, miR-98 overexpression attenuated the upregulation of Fas and caspase-3 in H2O2-treated cardiomyocytes at the mRNA and protein levels. Dual-luciferase reporter assay showed that miR-98 directly targeted to Fas 3′-UTR. Furthermore, MI mice injected with miR-98-agomir had a significant reduction of apoptotic cells, the serum LDH levels, myocardial caspase-3 activity, Fas and caspase-3 expression in heart tissues. Administration of miR-98-agomir also showed decreased infarct size and improved cardiac function. Collectively, miR-98 is downregulated in the MI heart and NRVCs in response to H2O2 stress, and miR-98 overexpression protects cardiomyocytes against apoptosis. Anti-apoptotic effects of miR-98 are associated with regulation of Fas/Caspase-3 apoptotic signal pathway.