Litcius/Paper detail

Noncoding RNAs and Cardiac Fibrosis

WU Chang-yong, Suli Bao, Ruijie Li, Huang Sun, Yunzhu Peng

2023Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Myocardial fibrosis is a common pathological feature of various terminal cardiovascular diseases. Progressive fibrosis is the pathological basis for the development and progression of many cardiac arrhythmias and heart failure. There are no effective reversal drugs for myocardial fibrosis due to the lack of understanding of the molecular mechanisms. Noncoding RNAs, a class of RNAs that do not function in coding proteins, have been found to be intimately involved in the life cycle of cardiomyocyte differentiation, transcription and apoptosis and are important regulators of cardiovascular disease. An increasing number of studies have shown that noncoding RNAs regulate the proliferation and transformation of cardiac fibroblasts through related signaling pathways and can be used as potential biomarkers and novel therapeutic targets for cardiac fibrosis. This article reviews the relationship between noncoding RNAs and cardiac fibrosis.

Topics & Concepts

Cardiac fibrosisFibrosisMyocardial fibrosisPathologicalMedicineLong non-coding RNAmicroRNAHeart failureBioinformaticsNon-coding RNADiseaseCardiac function curveCancer researchBiologyPathologyRNAInternal medicineGeneGeneticsCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchCircular RNAs in diseasesRNA modifications and cancer