Extracellular vesicles enclosed-miR-421 suppresses air pollution (PM 2.5 )-induced cardiac dysfunction via ACE2 signalling.

Publication date

2022-05

Authors

Wang, Hongyun
Wang, Tianhui
Rui, Wei
Xie, Jinxin
Xie, Yuling
Zhang, Xiao
Guan, Longfei
Li, Guoping
Lei, Zhiyong
Schiffelers, RaymondORCID 0000-0002-1012-9815ISNI 0000000045237985

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Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Air pollution, via ambient PM 2.5, is a big threat to public health since it associates with increased hospitalisation, incidence rate and mortality of cardiopulmonary injury. However, the potential mediators of pulmonary injury in PM 2.5 -induced cardiovascular disorder are not fully understood. To investigate a potential cross talk between lung and heart upon PM 2.5 exposure, intratracheal instillation in vivo, organ culture ex vivo and human bronchial epithelial cells (Beas-2B) culture in vitro experiments were performed respectively. The exposed supernatants of Beas-2B were collected to treat primary neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCMs). Upon intratracheal instillation, subacute PM 2.5 exposure caused cardiac dysfunction, which was time-dependent secondary to lung injury in mice, thereby demonstrating a cross-talk between lungs and heart potentially mediated via small extracellular vesicles (sEV). We isolated sEV from PM 2.5 -exposed mice serum and Beas-2B supernatants to analyse the change of sEV subpopulations in response to PM 2.5 . Single particle interferometric reflectance imaging sensing analysis (SP-IRIS) demonstrated that PM 2.5 increased CD63/CD81/CD9 positive particles. Our results indicated that respiratory system-derived sEV containing miR-421 contributed to cardiac dysfunction post-PM 2.5 exposure. Inhibition of miR-421 by AAV9-miR421-sponge could significantly reverse PM 2.5 -induced cardiac dysfunction in mice. We identified that cardiac angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) was a downstream target of sEV-miR421, and induced myocardial cell apoptosis and cardiac dysfunction. In addition, we observed that GW4869 (an inhibitor of sEV release) or diminazene aceturate (DIZE, an activator of ACE2) treatment could attenuate PM 2.5 -induced cardiac dysfunction in vivo. Taken together, our results suggest that PM 2.5 exposure promotes sEV-linked miR421 release after lung injury and hereby contributes to PM 2.5 -induced cardiac dysfunction via suppressing ACE2.

Keywords

Air Pollution/analysis, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2, Animals, Extracellular Vesicles, Heart Diseases, Lung Injury, Mice, MicroRNAs, Myocytes, Cardiac, Particulate Matter/adverse effects, Rats, extracellular vesicles, miR-421, ACE2, PM2.5, cardiac dysfunction, Cell Biology, Histology, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Journal Article

Citation

Wang, H, Wang, T, Rui, W, Xie, J, Xie, Y, Zhang, X, Guan, L, Li, G, Lei, Z, Schiffelers, R M, Sluijter, J P G & Xiao, J 2022, 'Extracellular vesicles enclosed-miR-421 suppresses air pollution (PM 2.5 )-induced cardiac dysfunction via ACE2 signalling.', Journal of Extracellular Vesicles, vol. 11, no. 5, e12222, pp. 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1002/jev2.12222