MicroRNAs as stress regulators in pancreatic beta cells and diabetes.

Mol Metab

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH Zürich, Institute for Molecular Health Science, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland.

Published: September 2017

Background: MicroRNAs have emerged as important regulatory non-coding RNAs that tune cellular responses to physiological perturbations and disease conditions. An increasing body of literature underlines the important roles of miRNA function in pancreatic β-cells in response to metabolic, genetic and inflammatory stress. Lessons from genetic loss- and gain-of-function studies have implicated several highly expressed and evolutionary conserved miRNAs in stress signal modulation, resolution and buffering, thereby forming stabilizing miRNA networks that preserve β-cell differentiation, function, proliferation and cell survival.

Scope Of Review: This review will summarize our current knowledge of how biologically relevant miRNAs regulate stress responses in pancreatic β-cells, discuss the challenges and opportunities associated with using secreted miRNAs as biomarkers and forecast how mechanistic knowledge of miRNA function can be exploited in developing miRNA-based therapeutics.

Major Conclusions: miRNAs play important roles in the function, differentiation, proliferation, and survival of pancreatic β-cells. Many miRNA families that are regulated by metabolic, genetic, and inflammatory stressors have been found to coordinate the adaptive responses of β-cells in conditions such as obesity and diabetes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5605735PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2017.06.020DOI Listing

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