1. Academic Validation
  2. MicroRNA-26 governs profibrillatory inward-rectifier potassium current changes in atrial fibrillation

MicroRNA-26 governs profibrillatory inward-rectifier potassium current changes in atrial fibrillation

  • J Clin Invest. 2013 May;123(5):1939-51. doi: 10.1172/JCI62185.
Xiaobin Luo 1 Zhenwei Pan Hongli Shan Jiening Xiao Xuelin Sun Ning Wang Huixian Lin Ling Xiao Ange Maguy Xiao-Yan Qi Yue Li Xu Gao Deli Dong Yong Zhang Yunlong Bai Jing Ai Lihua Sun Hang Lu Xiao-Yan Luo Zhiguo Wang Yanjie Lu Baofeng Yang Stanley Nattel
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Research Center, Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Abstract

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a highly prevalent arrhythmia with pronounced morbidity and mortality. Inward-rectifier K+ current (IK1) is believed to be an important regulator of reentrant-spiral dynamics and a major component of AF-related electrical remodeling. MicroRNA-26 (miR-26) is predicted to target the gene encoding KIR2.1, KCNJ2. We found that miR-26 was downregulated in atrial samples from AF Animals and patients and this downregulation was accompanied by upregulation of IK1/KIR2.1 protein. miR-26 overexpression suppressed expression of KCNJ2/KIR2.1. In contrast, miR-26 knockdown, inhibition, or binding-site mutation enhanced KCNJ2/KIR2.1 expression, establishing KCNJ2 as a miR-26 target. Knockdown of endogenous miR-26 promoted AF in mice, whereas adenovirus-mediated expression of miR-26 reduced AF vulnerability. Kcnj2-specific miR-masks eliminated miR-26-mediated reductions in Kcnj2, abolishing miR-26's protective effects, while coinjection of a Kcnj2-specific miR-mimic prevented miR-26 knockdown-associated AF in mice. Nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT), a known actor in AF-associated remodeling, was found to negatively regulate miR-26 transcription. Our results demonstrate that miR-26 controls the expression of KCNJ2 and suggest that this downregulation may promote AF.

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