Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107

Accumulation of senescent endothelial cells can contribute to endothelium dysfunction. Suppression of MTOR signaling has been shown to delay senescence but the mechanism that underpins this effect, particularly one that involves miRNAs, remains to be further defined. This study sought to identify mi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Khor, Eng Soon, Wong, Pooi Fong
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/21606/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocel.2018.05.016
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Malaya
id my.um.eprints.21606
record_format eprints
spelling my.um.eprints.216062019-07-15T04:02:36Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/21606/ Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107 Khor, Eng Soon Wong, Pooi Fong R Medicine Accumulation of senescent endothelial cells can contribute to endothelium dysfunction. Suppression of MTOR signaling has been shown to delay senescence but the mechanism that underpins this effect, particularly one that involves miRNAs, remains to be further defined. This study sought to identify miRNAs involved in MTORC1-mediated inhibition of replicative senescence in endothelial cells. Pre-senescent HUVECs were prolonged treated with low dose rapamycin (1 nM), an MTOR inhibitor. Rapamycin treatment down-regulated the phosphorylated MTOR, RPS6 and 4EBP1 expressions, which confirmed MTORC1 suppression. Prolonged low dose rapamycin treatment has significantly reduced the percentage of senescence-associated beta galactosidase (SA-β gal) positively stained senescent cells and P16INK4A expression in these cells. On the contrary, the percentage of BrdU-labelled proliferating cells has significantly increased. RPTOR, a positive regulator of MTORC1 was knockdown using RPTOR siRNA to inhibit MTORC1 activation. RPTOR knockdown was evidenced by significant suppressions of RPTOR mRNA and protein expression levels. In these cells, the expression of miR-107 was down-regulated whereas miR-145-5p and miR-217 were up-regulated. Target gene prediction revealed PTEN as the target of miR-107 and this was confirmed by biotin pull-down assay. Over-expression of miR-107 has decreased PTEN expression, increased MTORC1 activity, induced cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase and up-regulated P16INK4A expression but mitigated tube formation. Collectively, our findings revealed that delayed endothelial replicative senescence caused by the inhibition of MTORC1 activation could be modulated by miR-107 via its influence on PTEN. Elsevier 2018 Article PeerReviewed Khor, Eng Soon and Wong, Pooi Fong (2018) Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107. The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 101. pp. 64-73. ISSN 1357-2725 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocel.2018.05.016 doi:10.1016/j.biocel.2018.05.016
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Khor, Eng Soon
Wong, Pooi Fong
Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107
description Accumulation of senescent endothelial cells can contribute to endothelium dysfunction. Suppression of MTOR signaling has been shown to delay senescence but the mechanism that underpins this effect, particularly one that involves miRNAs, remains to be further defined. This study sought to identify miRNAs involved in MTORC1-mediated inhibition of replicative senescence in endothelial cells. Pre-senescent HUVECs were prolonged treated with low dose rapamycin (1 nM), an MTOR inhibitor. Rapamycin treatment down-regulated the phosphorylated MTOR, RPS6 and 4EBP1 expressions, which confirmed MTORC1 suppression. Prolonged low dose rapamycin treatment has significantly reduced the percentage of senescence-associated beta galactosidase (SA-β gal) positively stained senescent cells and P16INK4A expression in these cells. On the contrary, the percentage of BrdU-labelled proliferating cells has significantly increased. RPTOR, a positive regulator of MTORC1 was knockdown using RPTOR siRNA to inhibit MTORC1 activation. RPTOR knockdown was evidenced by significant suppressions of RPTOR mRNA and protein expression levels. In these cells, the expression of miR-107 was down-regulated whereas miR-145-5p and miR-217 were up-regulated. Target gene prediction revealed PTEN as the target of miR-107 and this was confirmed by biotin pull-down assay. Over-expression of miR-107 has decreased PTEN expression, increased MTORC1 activity, induced cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase and up-regulated P16INK4A expression but mitigated tube formation. Collectively, our findings revealed that delayed endothelial replicative senescence caused by the inhibition of MTORC1 activation could be modulated by miR-107 via its influence on PTEN.
format Article
author Khor, Eng Soon
Wong, Pooi Fong
author_facet Khor, Eng Soon
Wong, Pooi Fong
author_sort Khor, Eng Soon
title Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107
title_short Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107
title_full Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107
title_fullStr Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107
title_full_unstemmed Endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of MTORC1 signaling involves MicroRNA-107
title_sort endothelial replicative senescence delayed by the inhibition of mtorc1 signaling involves microrna-107
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/21606/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocel.2018.05.016
_version_ 1643691607065624576