Paras Kumar Mishra, PhD

Associate Professor at University of Nebraska Medical Center


Curriculum vitae



Cellular and Integrative Physiology

University of Nebraska Medical Center



Role of MicroRNAs in homocysteine induced oxidative stress


Journal article


P. Mishra, N. Tyagi, Munish Kumar, Soumi Kundu, S. Givvimani, U. Sen, S. Tyagi
2009

Semantic Scholar DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Mishra, P., Tyagi, N., Kumar, M., Kundu, S., Givvimani, S., Sen, U., & Tyagi, S. (2009). Role of MicroRNAs in homocysteine induced oxidative stress.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Mishra, P., N. Tyagi, Munish Kumar, Soumi Kundu, S. Givvimani, U. Sen, and S. Tyagi. “Role of MicroRNAs in Homocysteine Induced Oxidative Stress” (2009).


MLA   Click to copy
Mishra, P., et al. Role of MicroRNAs in Homocysteine Induced Oxidative Stress. 2009.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{p2009a,
  title = {Role of MicroRNAs in homocysteine induced oxidative stress},
  year = {2009},
  author = {Mishra, P. and Tyagi, N. and Kumar, Munish and Kundu, Soumi and Givvimani, S. and Sen, U. and Tyagi, S.}
}

Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRs) are a novel class of short, non‐coding, endogenous RNA molecules that negatively modulate gene expression primarily through base pairing at 3' untranslated region of target RNA causing mRNA cleavage or translational repression. Homocysteine (Hcy) is a thiol‐containing amino acid and elevated level (hyperhomocysteinemia‐HHcy) causes oxidative stress, one of the central causes of cardiovascular disease. We hypothesize that disregulation of miRs causes oxidative stress in HHcy. To test this hypothesis, we cultured HL1 cardiomyocytes and treated them with different doses of Hcy. Message from oxido‐redox enzymes were determined by RT‐ PCR and Western Blot. MicroRNA array was used to assess the differential expression of miRs in HHcy cardiomyocytes which were further confirmed by individual miR assay. The results suggest that in HHcy cardiomyocytes miR‐188 (‐3p and ‐5p) were dramatically down regulated. Individual miR assay also confirmed it. MMP‐9 which is a signature of extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling was increased in HHcy cardiomyocytes. These findings suggest the role of miR‐188 in Hcy induced oxidative stress leading to ECM remodeling.


Share



Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in