Paras Kumar Mishra, PhD

Associate Professor at University of Nebraska Medical Center


Curriculum vitae



Cellular and Integrative Physiology

University of Nebraska Medical Center



Transgenic Expression of miR-133a in the Diabetic Akita Heart Prevents Cardiac Remodeling and Cardiomyopathy


Journal article


Tyler N. Kambis, Hamid R. Shahshahan, S. Kar, S. Yadav, P. Mishra
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2019

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Kambis, T. N., Shahshahan, H. R., Kar, S., Yadav, S., & Mishra, P. (2019). Transgenic Expression of miR-133a in the Diabetic Akita Heart Prevents Cardiac Remodeling and Cardiomyopathy. Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Kambis, Tyler N., Hamid R. Shahshahan, S. Kar, S. Yadav, and P. Mishra. “Transgenic Expression of MiR-133a in the Diabetic Akita Heart Prevents Cardiac Remodeling and Cardiomyopathy.” Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Kambis, Tyler N., et al. “Transgenic Expression of MiR-133a in the Diabetic Akita Heart Prevents Cardiac Remodeling and Cardiomyopathy.” Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{tyler2019a,
  title = {Transgenic Expression of miR-133a in the Diabetic Akita Heart Prevents Cardiac Remodeling and Cardiomyopathy},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine},
  author = {Kambis, Tyler N. and Shahshahan, Hamid R. and Kar, S. and Yadav, S. and Mishra, P.}
}

Abstract

Advanced diabetes mellitus (DM) may have both insulin resistance and deficiency (double DM) that accelerates diabetic cardiomyopathy (DMCM), a cardiac muscle disorder. Reduced cardiac miR-133a, a cardioprotective miRNA, is associated with DMCM. However, it is unclear whether increasing miR-133a levels in the double DM heart could prevent DMCM. We hypothesized that increasing cardiac levels of miR-133a could prevent DMCM in Akita, a mouse model of double DM. To test the hypothesis, we created Akita/miR-133aTg mice, a new strain of Akita where miR-133a is overexpressed in the heart, by crossbreeding male Akita with female cardiac-specific miR-133a transgenic mice. We validated Akita/miR-133aTg mice by genotyping and phenotyping (miR-133a levels in the heart). To determine whether miR-133a overexpression could prevent cardiac remodeling and cardiomyopathy, we evaluated cardiac fibrosis, hypertrophy, and dysfunction (P-V loop) in 13–15 week male WT, Akita, Akita/miR-133aTg, and miR-133aTg mice. Our results revealed that miR-133a overexpression in the Akita heart prevents DM-induced cardiac fibrosis (reduced collagen deposition), hypertrophy (decreased beta-myosin heavy chain), and impaired contractility (downregulated calcium handling protein sarco-endoplasmic reticulum-ATPase-2a). These results demonstrate that increased levels of miR-133a in the DM heart could prevent cardiac remodeling. Our P-V loop analysis showed a trend of decreased cardiac output, stroke volume, and ± dp/dt in Akita, which were blunted in Akita/miR-133aTg heart. These findings suggest that 13–15 week Akita heart undergoes adverse remodeling toward cardiomyopathy, which is prevented by miR-133a overexpression. In addition, increased cardiac miR-133a in the Akita heart did not change blood glucose levels but decreased lipid accumulation in the heart, suggesting inhibition of metabolic remodeling in the heart. Thus, miR-133a could be a promising therapeutic candidate to prevent DMCM.


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