Reassessing the Abundance of miRNAs in the Human Pancreas and Rodent Cell Lines and Its Implication

Noncoding RNA. 2023 Mar 17;9(2):20. doi: 10.3390/ncrna9020020.

Abstract

miRNAs are critical for pancreas development and function. However, we found that there are discrepancies regarding pancreatic miRNA abundance in published datasets. To obtain a more relevant profile that is closer to the true profile, we profiled small RNAs from human islets cells, acini, and four rodent pancreatic cell lines routinely used in diabetes and pancreatic research using a bias reduction protocol for small RNA sequencing. In contrast to the previous notion that miR-375-3p is the most abundant pancreatic miRNA, we found that miR-148a-3p and miR-7-5p were also abundant in islets. In silico studies using predicted and validated targets of these three miRNAs revealed that they may work cooperatively in endocrine and exocrine cells. Our results also suggest, compared to the most-studied miR-375, that both miR-148a-3p and miR-7-5p may play more critical roles in the human pancreas. Moreover, according to in silico-predicted targets, we found that miR-375-3p had a much broader target spectrum by targeting the coding sequence and the 5' untranslated region, rather than the conventional 3' untranslated region, suggesting additional unexplored roles of miR-375-3p beyond the pancreas. Our study provides a valuable new resource for studying miRNAs in pancreata.

Keywords: acinus; islet; miRNA; miRNA-148a-3p; miRNA-375; miRNA-7-5p.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by an Innovated Project Award from the Wanek Family Project to Cure T1D, Arthur Riggs Diabetes & Metabolism Research Institute [WFPCT1D 2019-9 to G.S.] The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.