Functional Role of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of Diabetes Mellitus and Its Complications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. miR-155 Biogenesis
3. Dysregulation of miR-155 in DM: Findings from Clinical Studies
4. Different Roles of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of T1D and T2D
4.1. miR-155 and T2D
4.2. miR-155 and T1D
5. Physiological Roles of miR-155
6. Functional Role of miR-155 in DM Complications
6.1. miR-155 and Pathogenesis of Diabetic Nephropathy
6.2. Role of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of Diabetic Neuropathy and Diabetic Cardiomyopathy
6.3. miR-155 and Diabetic Retinopathy
7. Conclusions and Perspectives
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Groups Compared | N | Tissue(s) | Main Findings | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
T2D patients with or without diabetic retinopathy and healthy controls | 170 | plasma | ↑miR-155 in T2D patients with diabetic retinopathy compared to both controls and T2D patients without retinopathy | [44] |
T1D and age-matched healthy controls | 59 | plasma | ↑miR-155 in T1D patients compared to controls | [45] |
T2D patients with or without diabetic nephropathy | 145 | serum | ↑miR-155 in patients with diabetic nephropathy compared to T2D patients without diabetic nephropathy miR-155 corelated with microalbuminuria | [46] |
Patients with diabetic nephropathy and healthy controls | 38 | serum | ↑miR-155 in patients with diabetic nephropathy compared to healthy controls | [47] |
Patients with chronic hepatitis C with or without T2D, patients with T2D alone and healthy controls | 80 | serum | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients compared to healthy controls ↓miR-155 in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection and T2D compared to patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection alone | [41] |
T2D patients (grouped according to the level of albuminuria) and age-matched healthy controls | 83 | serum | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients regardless of albumin excretion compared to healthy controls | [42] |
T2D and age-matched healthy controls | 60 | serum | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients compared to controls | [40] |
T2D patients without diabetic retinopathy, with non-proliferative retinopathy or proliferative retinopathy and healthy controls | 80 | serum peripheral white blood cells | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients compared to healthy controls ↓miR-155 in T2D patients with non-proliferative retinopathy compared to T2D patients without retinopathy ↓miR-155 in T2D patients with proliferative retinopathy compared to T2D patients with non-proliferative retinopathy | [43] |
T2D and age-matched healthy controls | 40 | peripheral blood mononuclear cells | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients compared to controls | [48] |
T2D and age-matched healthy controls | 40 | peripheral blood mononuclear cells | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients compared to controls | [49] |
T1D patients and healthy controls | 959 | peripheral white blood cells | miR-155 rs767649 polymorphisms associated with protection from T1D | [50] |
T1D and age-matched healthy controls | 86 | peripheral blood mononuclear cells | ↑miR-155 in T1D patients compared to controls | [51] |
T1D and age-matched healthy controls | 41 | peripheral blood mononuclear cells | ↑miR-155 in T1D patients compared to controls | [52] |
T2D patients with or without diabetic neuropathy, healthy controls | 64 | peripheral blood mononuclear cells | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients with diabetic neuropathy compared to both healthy controls and T2D patients without diabetic neuropathy | [39] |
T2D patients without diabetic retinopathy, with non-proliferative retinopathy or proliferative retinopathy and healthy controls | 80 | peripheral blood mononuclear cells | ↑miR-155 in T2D patients compared to healthy controls ↑miR-155 in T2D patients with non-proliferative retinopathy compared to T2D patients without retinopathy ↑miR-155 in T2D patients with proliferative retinopathy compared to T2D patients with non-proliferative retinopathy | [53] |
Pregnant women with gestational diabetes and healthy pregnant women | 69 | peripheral white blood cells | ↓miR-155 in pregnant women with gestational diabetes compared to healthy controls | [54] |
T2D and age-matched healthy controls | 44 | platelets | ↓miR-155 in T2D patients compared to controls | [55] |
T1D patients with or without diabetic retinopathy and healthy controls | 21 | extracellular vesicles from blood | ↓miR-155 in T1D patients with diabetic retinopathy compared to both healthy controls and T1D patients without diabetic retinopathy | [56] |
T2D patients and age-matched healthy controls | 15 | adipose tissue | miR-155 inversely correlated with mean adipocyte volume and macrophage infiltration | [57] |
Obese and non-obese patients | 50 | adipose tissue | ↑miR-155 in obese individuals | [58] |
Patients with diabetic nephropathy and healthy controls | 9 | kidney | ↑miR-155 in patients with diabetic nephropathy compared to healthy controls | [59] |
Patients with diabetic nephropathy and healthy controls | 98 | kidney | ↑miR-155 in patients with diabetic nephropathy compared to healthy controls | [60] |
T1D patients with or without diabetic nephropathy and healthy controls | 192 | urine kidney | ↑miR-155 in patients with diabetic nephropathy compared to healthy controls and T1D patients without diabetic nephropathy | [61] |
T1D patients with or without albuminuria and healthy controls | 34 | urinary exosomes | ↓miR-155 in T1D patients with albuminuria compared both to T1D patients without albuminuria and healthy control | [62] |
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Jankauskas, S.S.; Gambardella, J.; Sardu, C.; Lombardi, A.; Santulli, G. Functional Role of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of Diabetes Mellitus and Its Complications. Non-Coding RNA 2021, 7, 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ncrna7030039
Jankauskas SS, Gambardella J, Sardu C, Lombardi A, Santulli G. Functional Role of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of Diabetes Mellitus and Its Complications. Non-Coding RNA. 2021; 7(3):39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ncrna7030039
Chicago/Turabian StyleJankauskas, Stanislovas S., Jessica Gambardella, Celestino Sardu, Angela Lombardi, and Gaetano Santulli. 2021. "Functional Role of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of Diabetes Mellitus and Its Complications" Non-Coding RNA 7, no. 3: 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ncrna7030039
APA StyleJankauskas, S. S., Gambardella, J., Sardu, C., Lombardi, A., & Santulli, G. (2021). Functional Role of miR-155 in the Pathogenesis of Diabetes Mellitus and Its Complications. Non-Coding RNA, 7(3), 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/ncrna7030039