Abstract:
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding RNAs about 22 nucleotides long that
can regulate the gene expression at mRNA level by RNA silencing. As such,
differential expression of miRNA leading to regulation of gene expression during
various infections has been investigated as potential biomarkers for many diseases.
Perturbations in lipid homeostasis and cellular imbalance of cholesterol and fatty acid
metabolism has been implicated in Dengue infections. Intronic microRNA, miR33a,
located within the sterol regulatory element-binding protein-2 and -1 genes, has been
shown to regulate cholesterol homeostasis in concert with their host genes. In fact,
miR33a has shown differential expression in cultured cells infected with Dengue
virus. Therefore, we evaluated the expression level of miR33a in human plasma to
evaluate its potential as a biomarker for severe Dengue infection.
Total RNA was purified from plasma from six EDTA blood samples collected with
consent from healthy people using mirVana microRNA isolation kit (Applied
Biosciences). Plasma was separated within one hour of sample collection and was
stored at -80 °C. Purified RNA was used for subsequent 3’polyadenylation of the
mature microRNA and cDNA synthesis with oligo-dT primers with a universal tag
sequence using miScript II RT Kit (Qiagen). Similarly, negative control experiments
for genomic DNA were carried out with same amount of RNA without any reverse
transcriptase in the cDNA synthesis reaction (-RT). Presence of miR33a in plasma
was confirmed by quantitative real-time PCR using the mature miRNA33a
nucleotide sequence with thiamidine in place of uracils as the forward primer and a
universal primer with universal tag sequence in the oligo-dT primer as the reverse
primer. Target specificity of the miR33a specific primer was confirmed by NCBI
BLASTN suite. Quantitative real-time PCR using miScript SYBR Green PCR Kit
(Qiagen) was performed using diluted cDNA at an annealing temperature of 58 °C
for 40 cycles followed by melting curve analysis. Negative control reactions were
carried out in parallel with same volume of water and -RT as template. miR33a in
human plasma was detected above threshold 1.0 at cycle number (Ct) 35. The Ct
number is higher due to the low abundance of RNA in plasma. miR33a was
consistently detected above threshold at the given Ct values while no amplification
was detected in the negative control experiments containing water or -RT as
template, indicating the absence of primer dimer formation and genomic DNA.
Presence of a single peak in the melting curve confirmed single product
amplification. Therefore, plasma is a good source for detection of miR33a to evaluate
differential expression in severe Dengue.