Title of article :
Inflamma-miRs, Mito-miRs, and SA-miRs: Are They at the Crossroads of Inflammaging?
Author/Authors :
Farokhimanesh, Samila Department of Biotechnology - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Komeili, Ali Applied Biophotonics Research Center - Science and Research Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Nilforoushzadeh, Mohammad Ali Skin and Stem Cell Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Zare, Mehrak Skin and Stem Cell Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Context: Inflammaging is the latest theory of aging, which is the chronic, low-grade, and systematic inflammation developing the
major risk factors for age-related diseases. Inflammaging is characterized by increasing the circulating pro-inflammatory factors
and decreasing the circulatory anti-inflammatory factors. Recent findings propose that several classes of microRNAs are differentially
expressed during inflammaging.
Evidence Acquisition: Inflamma-miRs are a class of miRs capable of regulating the inflammatory status owing to their ability to
modulate pro-inflammatory molecules. Since the role of miRNAs in aging is not restricted to inflammation, mito-miRs and SA-miRs
are also involved in organismal aging. Considering the important role of mitochondria in aging, dysfunctional mitochondria in
aged cells may induce an inflammatory response by producing ROS, as well as oxidized mtDNA and mito-miRNAs. Another important
subset of miRNA that fuels inflammaging is senescence-associated miRNA (SA-miRs) that promotes senescence-associated
secretory phenotype. Senescent cells have dysfunctional mitochondria, which can promote inflammaging through continuous immune
system stimulation.
Results: The evaluation of three classes of miRNAs involved in inflammaging shows that there are some miRs at the intersection
of inflamma-miRs, SA-miRs, and mito-miRs, called SA-inflamma-mitomiRs subset, which contains miR-19b, miR-20a, miR-146a, and
miR-181a.
Conclusions: This overlap shows that this panel of miRNAs has mitochondrial targets whose modulation is implicated in
senescence-associated secretory phenotype and the formation of SASP might be an important contributor to chronic inflammation.
Keywords :
Inflammaging , Senescence , Inflamma-miR , Mito-miR , SA-miR
Journal title :
Journal of Skin and Stem Cell