Publication | Open Access
Circulating MicroRNAs Associate With Diabetic Nephropathy and Systemic Microvascular Damage and Normalize After Simultaneous Pancreas–Kidney Transplantation
83
Citations
21
References
2015
Year
Systemic Microvascular DamageMicrovascular DiseaseImmunologyRenal InflammationPancreas TransplantationMirna ProfilesKidney Tubule RemodelingChronic Kidney DiseaseMicrovascular DysfunctionAtherosclerosisMicrornas AssociateKidney TransplantVascular BiologyDiabetes ComplicationsCandidate MirnasSimultaneous Pancreas–kidney TransplantationMicrorna DetectionIslet TransplantationUrologyCardiovascular DiseaseDiabetesDiabetic Kidney DiseaseDiabetes MellitusMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
Because microvascular disease is one of the most important drivers of diabetic complications, early monitoring of microvascular integrity may be of clinical value. By assessing profiles of circulating microRNAs (miRNAs), known regulators of microvascular pathophysiology, in healthy controls and diabetic nephropathy (DN) patients before and after simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPK), we aimed to identify differentially expressed miRNAs that associate with microvascular impairment. Following a pilot study, we selected 13 candidate miRNAs and determined their circulating levels in DN (n = 21), SPK-patients (n = 37), healthy controls (n = 19), type 1 diabetes mellitus patients (n = 15) and DN patients with a kidney transplant (n = 15). For validation of selected miRNAs, 14 DN patients were studied longitudinally up to 12 months after SPK. We demonstrated a direct association of miR-25, -27a, -126, -130b, -132, -152, -181a, -223, -320, -326, -340, -574-3p and -660 with DN. Of those, miR-25, -27a, -130b, -132, -152, -320, -326, -340, -574-3p and -660 normalized after SPK. Importantly, circulating levels of some of these miRNAs tightly associate with microvascular impairment as they relate to aberrant capillary tortuosity, angiopoietin-2/angiopoietin-1 ratios, circulating levels of soluble-thrombomodulin and insulin-like growth factor. Taken together, circulating miRNA profiles associate with DN and systemic microvascular damage, and might serve to identify individuals at risk of experiencing microvascular complications, as well as give insight into underlying pathologies.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1