4.6 Article

miR-21 antagonism reprograms macrophage metabolism and abrogates chronic allograft vasculopathy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages 3280-3295

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16581

Keywords

basic (laboratory) research/science; heart (allograft) function/dysfunction; heart transplantation/cardiology; immunobiology; macrophage/monocyte biology: activation; molecular biology: micro RNA; rejection: vascular; translational research/science

Funding

  1. Ministry of Health [RF-2016-02362512]

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The study found that miR-21 is overexpressed in chronic allograft vasculopathy (CAV) in both murine and human samples, and targeting miR-21 delays the onset of CAV by reprogramming macrophage metabolism.
Despite much progress in improving graft outcome during cardiac transplantation, chronic allograft vasculopathy (CAV) remains an impediment to long-term graft survival. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) emerged as regulators of the immune response. Here, we aimed to examine the miRNA network involved in CAV. miRNA profiling of heart samples obtained from a murine model of CAV and from cardiac-transplanted patients with CAV demonstrated that miR-21 was most significantly expressed and was primarily localized to macrophages. Interestingly, macrophage depletion with clodronate did not significantly prolong allograft survival in mice, while conditional deletion of miR-21 in macrophages or the use of a specific miR-21 antagomir resulted in indefinite cardiac allograft survival and abrogated CAV. The immunophenotype, secretome, ability to phagocytose, migration, and antigen presentation of macrophages were unaffected by miR-21 targeting, while macrophage metabolism was reprogrammed, with a shift toward oxidative phosphorylation in naive macrophages and with an inhibition of glycolysis in pro-inflammatory macrophages. The aforementioned effects resulted in an increase in M2-like macrophages, which could be reverted by the addition of L-arginine. RNA-seq analysis confirmed alterations in arginase-associated pathways associated with miR-21 antagonism. In conclusion, miR-21 is overexpressed in murine and human CAV, and its targeting delays CAV onset by reprogramming macrophages metabolism.

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