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Authors Zhou TY, Zhong YJ, Hu Y, Sun C, Wang YX, Wang GF
Received 19 March 2018
Accepted for publication 17 May 2018
Published 1 August 2018 Volume 2018:13 Pages 2339—2349
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/COPD.S168629
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Colin Mak
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Professor Chunxue Bai
Background: Persistent exposure to cigarette smoke or biomass fuels induces
oxidative stress and apoptosis in bronchial epithelium, which is one of the
most important pathogenic mechanisms of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD). Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is an aggravating risk factor of COPD exacerbation. Animal evidence
showed PM2.5 accelerated
lung inflammation and oxidative stress in COPD mice, but the mechanism is still
not clear. Recently, we found that miR-194-3p is a novel biomarker of both COPD
and PM2.5 exposure,
and miR-194 family has been reported to be involved in cell proliferation and
apoptosis. Thus, we propose a hypothesis: PM2.5 can accelerate apoptotic response of airway epithelial cells in
COPD and miR-194 is a potential involved regulator.
Materials and
methods: Human bronchial epithelial cells
(HBEpiCs) were treated with normal media, cigarette smoke solution (CSS) and PM2.5-CSS for 24 h. miR-194-3p mimics, inhibitors and scrambled controls were
non-transfected or pre-transfected into HBEpiCs for 48 h. MircroRNAs and mRNA
expression were quantified by qRT-PCR. Protein expression was analyzed by
western blotting. Caspase activities, mitochondrial membrane potential and
TUNEL-positive cells were detected to analyze apoptosis. Bioinformatics and
luciferase analysis were used to identify the predicted binding site of
miR-194-3p and potential targets.
Results: In our study, we found that PM2.5 significantly aggravated apoptosis in cigarette-inflamed HBEpiCs.
miR-194-3p was dramatically downregulated in PM2.5-CSS-treated HBEpiCs. Bioinformatics and luciferase experiments reported
that death-associated protein kinase 1 (DAPK1), regulating caspase 3 activities
in apoptosis, was directly targeted by miR-194-3p. Inhibition of miR-194-3p
increased DAPK1 expression and apoptosis in normal HBEpiCs. Importantly,
overexpression of miR-194-3p suppressed apoptosis in PM2.5-CSS HBEpiCs.
Conclusion: These results suggested that miR-194-3p was a protective regulator
involved in apoptosis pathway and a potential therapeutic target for treatment
of bronchial epithelial injury aggravation induced by PM2.5.
Keywords: fine particulate matter, PM2.5, apoptosis, COPD, bronchial epithelial cells, miR-194-3p