Guay Claudiane, Regazzi Romano
Department of Fundamental Neurosciences, Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Rue du Bugnon 9, 1005, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Diabetologia. 2015 Mar;58(3):456-63. doi: 10.1007/s00125-014-3471-x. Epub 2014 Dec 16.
MicroRNAs are important regulators of gene expression. The vast majority of the cells in our body rely on hundreds of these tiny non-coding RNA molecules to precisely adjust their protein repertoire and faithfully accomplish their tasks. Indeed, alterations in the microRNA profile can lead to cellular dysfunction that favours the appearance of several diseases. A specific set of microRNAs plays a crucial role in pancreatic beta cell differentiation and is essential for the fine-tuning of insulin secretion and for compensatory beta cell mass expansion in response to insulin resistance. Recently, several independent studies reported alterations in microRNA levels in the islets of animal models of diabetes and in islets isolated from diabetic patients. Surprisingly, many of the changes in microRNA expression observed in animal models of diabetes were not detected in the islets of diabetic patients and vice versa. These findings are unlikely to merely reflect species differences because microRNAs are highly conserved in mammals. These puzzling results are most probably explained by fundamental differences in the experimental approaches which selectively highlight the microRNAs directly contributing to diabetes development, the microRNAs predisposing individuals to the disease or the microRNAs displaying expression changes subsequent to the development of diabetes. In this review we will highlight the suitability of the different models for addressing each of these questions and propose future strategies that should allow us to obtain a better understanding of the contribution of microRNAs to the development of diabetes mellitus in humans.
微小RNA是基因表达的重要调节因子。我们体内绝大多数细胞依靠数百种这类微小的非编码RNA分子来精确调整其蛋白质组成,并忠实地完成它们的任务。事实上,微小RNA谱的改变会导致细胞功能障碍,进而引发多种疾病。一组特定的微小RNA在胰腺β细胞分化中起关键作用,对于胰岛素分泌的微调以及应对胰岛素抵抗时β细胞质量的代偿性扩增至关重要。最近,几项独立研究报告了糖尿病动物模型的胰岛以及从糖尿病患者分离出的胰岛中微小RNA水平的改变。令人惊讶的是,在糖尿病动物模型中观察到的许多微小RNA表达变化在糖尿病患者的胰岛中并未检测到,反之亦然。这些发现不太可能仅仅反映物种差异,因为微小RNA在哺乳动物中高度保守。这些令人困惑的结果很可能是由实验方法的根本差异所解释的,这些差异选择性地突出了直接促成糖尿病发展的微小RNA、使个体易患该疾病的微小RNA或在糖尿病发展后显示表达变化的微小RNA。在这篇综述中,我们将强调不同模型对于解决这些问题的适用性,并提出未来的策略,这些策略应能让我们更好地理解微小RNA对人类糖尿病发展的贡献。