Litcius/Paper detail

Identification of a miRNA Panel with a Potential Determinant Role in Patients Suffering from Periodontitis

Oana Baru, Lajos Ráduly, Cecilia Bica, Paul Chiroi, Liviuţa Budişan, Nikolay Mehterov, Cristina Ciocan, Laura Pop, Smaranda Buduru, Cornelia Braicu, Mândra Badea, Ioana Berindan‐Neagoe

2023Current Issues in Molecular Biology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent years, the role of microRNA (miRNA) in post-transcriptional gene regulation has advanced and supports strong evidence related to their important role in the regulation of a wide range of fundamental biological processes. Our study focuses on identifying specific alterations of miRNA patterns in periodontitis compared with healthy subjects. In the present study, we mapped the major miRNAs altered in patients with periodontitis (n = 3) compared with healthy subjects (n = 5), using microarray technology followed by a validation step by qRT-PCR and Ingenuity Pathways Analysis. Compared to healthy subjects, 159 differentially expressed miRNAs were identified among periodontitis patients, of which 89 were downregulated, and 70 were upregulated, considering a fold change of ±1.5 as the cut-off value and p ≤ 0.05. Key angiogenic miRNAs (miR-191-3p, miR-221-3p, miR-224-5p, miR-1228-3p) were further validated on a separate cohort of patients with periodontitis versus healthy controls by qRT-PCR, confirming the microarray data. Our findings indicate a periodontitis-specific miRNA expression pattern representing an essential issue for testing new potential diagnostic or prognostic biomarkers for periodontal disease. The identified miRNA profile in periodontal gingival tissue was linked to angiogenesis, with an important molecular mechanism that orchestrates cell fate.

Topics & Concepts

PeriodontitismicroRNAMicroarrayBiologyMicroarray analysis techniquesBioinformaticsFold changeMedicineDownregulation and upregulationGeneComputational biologyGene expressionInternal medicineGeneticsMicroRNA in disease regulationOral microbiology and periodontitis researchCancer-related molecular mechanisms research