Anti–miR-93-5p therapy prolongs sepsis survival by restoring the peripheral immune response
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31762Date
2023-06-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Dragomir, Mihnea P.; Fuentes-Mattei, Enrique; Winkle, Melanie; Okubo, Keishi; Bayraktar, Recep; Knutsen, Erik; Qdaisat, Aiham; Chen, Meng; Li, Yongfeng; Shimizu, Masayoshi; Pang, Lan; Liu, Kevin; Liu, Xiuping; Anfossi, Simone; Zhang, Huanyu; Koch, Ines; Tran, Anh M.; Mohapatra, Swati; Ton, Anh; Kaplan, Mecit; Anderson, Matthew W.; Rothfuss, Spencer J.; Silasi, Robert; Keshari, Ravi S.; Ferracin, Manuela; Ivan, Cristina; Rodriguez-Aguayo, Cristian; Lopez-Berestein, Gabriel; Georgescu, Constantin; Banerjee, Pinaki P.; Basar, Rafet; Li, Ziyi; Horst, David; Vasilescu, Catalin; Bertilaccio, Maria Teresa S.; Rezvani, Katayoun; Lupu, Florea; Yeung, Sai-Ching; Calin, George A.Abstract
Sepsis remains a leading cause of death for humans and currently has no pathogenesis-specific therapy. Hampered
progress is partly due to a lack of insight into deep mechanistic processes. In the past decade, deciphering the functions
of small noncoding miRNAs in sepsis pathogenesis became a dynamic research topic. To screen for new miRNA targets
for sepsis therapeutics, we used samples for miRNA array analysis of PBMCs from patients with sepsis and control
individuals, blood samples from 2 cohorts of patients with sepsis, and multiple animal models: mouse cecum ligation
puncture–induced (CLP-induced) sepsis, mouse viral miRNA challenge, and baboon Gram+
and Gram–
sepsis models.
miR-93-5p met the criteria for a therapeutic target, as it was overexpressed in baboons that died early after induction of
sepsis, was downregulated in patients who survived after sepsis, and correlated with negative clinical prognosticators for
sepsis. Therapeutically, inhibition of miR-93-5p prolonged the overall survival of mice with CLP-induced sepsis, with a
stronger effect in older mice. Mechanistically, anti–miR-93-5p therapy reduced inflammatory monocytes and increased
circulating effector memory T cells, especially the CD4+
subset. AGO2 IP in miR-93–KO T cells identified important
regulatory receptors, such as CD28, as direct miR-93-5p target genes. In conclusion, miR-93-5p is a potential therapeutic
target in sepsis through the regulation of both innate and adaptive immunity, with possibly a greater benefit for elderly
patients than for young patients.
Publisher
American Society for Clinical InvestigationCitation
Dragomir, Fuentes-Mattei, Winkle, Okubo, Bayraktar, Knutsen, Qdaisat, Chen, Li, Shimizu, Pang, Liu, Liu, Anfossi, Zhang, Koch, Tran, Mohapatra, Ton, Kaplan, Anderson, Rothfuss, Silasi, Keshari, Ferracin, Ivan, Rodriguez-Aguayo, Lopez-Berestein, Georgescu, Banerjee, Basar, Li, Horst, Vasilescu, Bertilaccio, Rezvani, Lupu, Yeung, Calin. Anti–miR-93-5p therapy prolongs sepsis survival by restoring the peripheral immune response. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2023;133(14)Metadata
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