4.6 Article

LncRNA MALAT1 promotes oxidized low-density lipoprotein-induced autophagy in HUVECs by inhibiting the PI3K/AKT pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 120, Issue 3, Pages 4092-4101

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcb.27694

Keywords

autophagy; endothelial cells; metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT1); oxidized low-density lipoprotein (Ox-LDL)

Funding

  1. Municipal Scientific and Technological Project of Qingdao City [15-9-2-86-nsh]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [2015GSF118172]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81571112, 81641046, 8177050788]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Emerging evidence suggests that long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are involved in many biological processes, such as cell growth, differentiation, apoptosis, and autophagy. Metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT1), highly expressed in endothelial cells, is well conserved and implicated in endothelial cell migration and proliferation. However, whether MALAT1 participates in oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL)-induced autophagy regulation in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) remains unknown. In this study, we observed that autophagy was upregulated and MALAT1 expression was markedly increased in HUVECs treated with ox-LDL. The ox-LDL-induced autophagy of HUVECs is significantly associated with the PI3K/AKT pathway. Furthermore, we found that MALAT1 overexpression inhibited PI3K, Akt and p70S6K phosphorylation and downregulated RHEB expression, simultaneously increasing ox-LDL-induced autophagy. MALAT1 silencing caused higher phosphorylated PI3K, Akt and p70S6K levels, upregulated RHEB expression and markedly suppressed autophagy. These results indicated that lncRNA MALAT1 promotes ox-LDL-induced autophagy in HUVECs partly through the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available