Arsenic aggravates the progression of diabetic nephropathy through miRNA-mRNA-autophagy axis

In this study, an arsenic-exposed (10 mg/L and 25 mg/L) DN mouse model was established through drinking water for 14 weeks. The results showed that 25 mg/L arsenic exposure increased the renal fibrosis in DN mice significantly, and urinary mAlb level increased with the increasing of arsenic exposure level. RNA sequencing showed that autophagy-related pathways were significantly activated under the exposure dose of 25 mg/L, and levels of Beclin1 and p-ATG16L1/ATG16L1 were significantly higher in the 25 mg/L arsenic group compared to the control group. Silico analysis predicted the microRNAs that could regulate the hub genes of Mapk1, Rhoa and Cdc42, and dual-luciferase gene reporter assay was used to verify the targeted binding between these mRNAs and microRNAs. Our results suggested that high arsenic exposure could aggravate the progression of DN by altering autophagy, the miRNA-mRNA axles of let-7a-1-3p, let-7b-3p, let-7f-1-3p, miR-98-3p/Cdc42, Mapk1, Rhoa, could be considered promising targets to explore the mechanisms and therapeutic measures of DN after exposure to high levels of arsenic.PMID:38579892 | DOI:10.1016/j.fct.2024.114628
Source: Food and Chemical Toxicology - Category: Food Science Authors: Source Type: research