Deep sequencing unveils altered cardiac miRNome in congenital heart disease

Mol Genet Genomics. 2022 Jul;297(4):1123-1139. doi: 10.1007/s00438-022-01908-z. Epub 2022 Jun 7.

Abstract

Congenital heart disease (CHD) surges from fetal cardiac dysmorphogenesis and chiefly contributes to perinatal morbidity and cardiovascular disease mortality. A continual rise in prevalence and prerequisite postoperative disease management creates need for better understanding and new strategies to control the disease. The interaction between genetic and non-genetic factors roots the multifactorial status of this disease, which remains incompletely explored. The small non-coding microRNAs (miRs, miRNAs) regulate several biological processes via post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. Abnormal expression of miRs in developing and adult heart is associated with anomalous cardiac cell differentiation, cardiac dysfunction, and cardiovascular diseases. Here, we attempt to discover the changes in cardiac miRNA transcriptome in CHD patients over those without CHD (non-CHD) and find its role in CHD through functional annotation. This study explores the miRNome in three most commonly occurring CHD subtypes, namely atrial septal defect (ASD), ventricular septal defect (VSD), and tetralogy of fallot (TOF). We found 295 dysregulated miRNAs through high-throughput sequencing of the cardiac tissues. The bioinformatically predicted targets of these differentially expressed miRs were functionally annotated to know they were entailed in cell signal regulatory pathways, profoundly responsible for cell proliferation, survival, angiogenesis, migration and cell cycle regulation. Selective miRs (hsa-miR-221-3p, hsa-miR-218-5p, hsa-miR-873-5p) whose expression was validated by qRT-PCR, have been reported for cardiogenesis, cardiomyocyte proliferation, cardioprotection and cardiac dysfunction. These results indicate that the altered miRNome to be responsible for the disease status in CHD patients. Our data expand the existing knowledge on the epigenetic changes in CHD. In future, characterization of these cardiac-specific miRs will add huge potential to understand cardiac development, function, and molecular pathogenesis of heart diseases with a prospect of epigenetic manipulation for cardiac repair.

Keywords: Deep sequencing; Heart; Molecular pathogenesis of CHD; Septal defect; Tetralogy of fallot; miRNA.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Female
  • Heart Defects, Congenital* / complications
  • Heart Defects, Congenital* / genetics
  • High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
  • Humans
  • MicroRNAs* / genetics
  • Tetralogy of Fallot / genetics

Substances

  • MIRN218 microRNA, human
  • MIRN873 microRNA, human
  • MicroRNAs