Myocardial Damage in Cardiovascular Disease: Circulating MicroRNA-208b and MicroRNA-499
Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN
Circulating MicroRNA-208b and MicroRNA-499 Reflect Myocardial Damage in Cardiovascular Disease
Maarten F. Corsten, MD, Robert Dennert, MD, Sylvia Jochems, BSc, Tatiana Kuznetsova, MD, PhD, Yvan Devaux, PhD, Leon Hofstra, MD, PhD, Daniel R. Wagner, MD, PhD, Jan A. Staessen, MD, PhD, Stephane Heymans, MD, PhD and Blanche Schroen, PhD
Author Affiliations
From the Center for Heart Failure Research (M.F.C., R.D., S.J., S.H., B.S.), Cardiovascular Research Institute, Maastricht, The Netherlands; the Division of Hypertension and Cardiovascular Rehabilitation (T.K., J.A.S.), Department of Cardiovascular Diseases, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium and Department of Epidemiology, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht, The Netherlands; Centre de Recherche Public–Santé, Luxembourg (Y.D., D.R.W.), Luxembourg; Maastricht University Medical Center (L.H.), Maastricht, The Netherlands; and Centre Hospitalier Luxembourg (D.R.W.), Luxembourg.
Correspondence to Blanche Schroen, PhD, Center for Heart Failure Research, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, Universiteitssingel 50, 6229 ER Maastricht, The Netherlands. E-mail b.schroen@cardio.unimaas.nl
Drs Heymans and Schroen contributed equally to this work.
Abstract
Background— Small RNA molecules, called microRNAs, freely circulate in human plasma and correlate with varying pathologies. In this study, we explored their diagnostic potential in a selection of prevalent cardiovascular disorders.
Methods and Results— MicroRNAs were isolated from plasmas from well-characterized patients with varying degrees of cardiac damage:
(1) acute myocardial infarction,
(2) viral myocarditis,
(3) diastolic dysfunction, and
(4) acute heart failure.
Plasma levels of selected microRNAs, including heart-associated (miR-1, -133a, -208b, and -499), fibrosis-associated (miR-21 and miR-29b), and leukocyte-associated (miR-146, -155, and -223) candidates, were subsequently assessed using real-time polymerase chain reaction. Strikingly, in plasma from acute myocardial infarction patients, cardiac myocyte–associated miR-208b and -499 were highly elevated, 1600-fold (P<0.005) and 100-fold (P<0.0005), respectively, as compared with control subjects. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis revealed an area under the curve of 0.94 (P<10−10) for miR-208b and 0.92 (P<10−9) for miR-499. Both microRNAs correlated with plasma troponin T, indicating release of microRNAs from injured cardiomyocytes. In viral myocarditis, we observed a milder but significant elevation of these microRNAs, 30-fold and 6-fold, respectively. Plasma levels of leukocyte-expressed microRNAs were not significantly increased in acute myocardial infarction or viral myocarditis patients, despite elevated white blood cell counts. In patients with acute heart failure, only miR-499 was significantly elevated (2-fold), whereas no significant changes in microRNAs studied could be observed in diastolic dysfunction. Remarkably, plasma microRNA levels were not affected by a wide range of clinical confounders, including age, sex, body mass index, kidney function, systolic blood pressure, and white blood cell count.
Conclusions— Cardiac damage initiates the detectable release of cardiomyocyte-specific microRNAs-208b and -499 into the circulation.
SOURCE:
Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics. 2010; 3: 499-506
Published online before print October 4, 2010,
doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.110.957415
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