Y RNA fragment in extracellular vesicles confers cardioprotection via modulation of IL ‐10 expression and secretion
2017; Springer Nature; Volume: 9; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.15252/emmm.201606924
ISSN1757-4684
AutoresLinda Cambier, Geoffrey de Couto, Ahmed Ibrahim, Antonio Echavez, Jackelyn Valle, Weixin Liu, Michelle Kreke, Rachel Smith, Linda Marbán, Eduardo Marbán,
Tópico(s)MicroRNA in disease regulation
ResumoResearch Article6 February 2017Open Access Transparent process Y RNA fragment in extracellular vesicles confers cardioprotection via modulation of IL-10 expression and secretion Linda Cambier Linda Cambier Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Geoffrey de Couto Geoffrey de Couto Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Ahmed Ibrahim Ahmed Ibrahim Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Antonio K Echavez Antonio K Echavez Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Jackelyn Valle Jackelyn Valle Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Weixin Liu Weixin Liu Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Michelle Kreke Michelle Kreke Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Rachel R Smith Rachel R Smith Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Linda Marbán Linda Marbán Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Eduardo Marbán Corresponding Author Eduardo Marbán [email protected] orcid.org/0000-0002-3863-280X Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Linda Cambier Linda Cambier Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Geoffrey de Couto Geoffrey de Couto Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Ahmed Ibrahim Ahmed Ibrahim Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Antonio K Echavez Antonio K Echavez Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Jackelyn Valle Jackelyn Valle Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Weixin Liu Weixin Liu Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Michelle Kreke Michelle Kreke Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Rachel R Smith Rachel R Smith Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Linda Marbán Linda Marbán Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Eduardo Marbán Corresponding Author Eduardo Marbán [email protected] orcid.org/0000-0002-3863-280X Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Author Information Linda Cambier1,‡, Geoffrey Couto1,‡, Ahmed Ibrahim2, Antonio K Echavez1, Jackelyn Valle1, Weixin Liu1, Michelle Kreke2, Rachel R Smith2, Linda Marbán2 and Eduardo Marbán *,1 1Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA 2Capricor Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA ‡These authors contributed equally to this work *Corresponding author. Tel: +1 310 423 7557; Fax: +1 310 423 7637; E-mail: [email protected] EMBO Mol Med (2017)9:337-352https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201606924 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. Peer ReviewDownload a summary of the editorial decision process including editorial decision letters, reviewer comments and author responses to feedback. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info Abstract Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) reduce myocardial infarct size via secreted extracellular vesicles (CDC-EVs), including exosomes, which alter macrophage polarization. We questioned whether short non-coding RNA species of unknown function within CDC-EVs contribute to cardioprotection. The most abundant RNA species in CDC-EVs is a Y RNA fragment (EV-YF1); its relative abundance in CDC-EVs correlates with CDC potency in vivo. Fluorescently labeled EV-YF1 is actively transferred from CDCs to target macrophages via CDC-EVs. Direct transfection of macrophages with EV-YF1 induced transcription and secretion of IL-10. When cocultured with rat cardiomyocytes, EV-YF1-primed macrophages were potently cytoprotective toward oxidatively stressed cardiomyocytes through induction of IL-10. In vivo, intracoronary injection of EV-YF1 following ischemia/reperfusion reduced infarct size. A fragment of Y RNA, highly enriched in CDC-EVs, alters Il10 gene expression and enhances IL-10 protein secretion. The demonstration that EV-YF1 confers cardioprotection highlights the potential importance of diverse exosomal contents of unknown function, above and beyond the usual suspects (e.g., microRNAs and proteins). Synopsis A Y RNA fragment enriched in extracellular vesicles from cardiosphere-derived cells was identified and found to increase IL-10 expression and secretion in macrophages. The fragment confers cardioprotection after ischemic injury in a rat model. A Y RNA fragment is the most abundant small RNA species in extracellular vesicles secreted from cardiosphere-derived cells. When overexpressed in macrophages, this Y RNA fragment increases Il-10 gene expression and secretion of IL-10 protein, rendering macrophages cardioprotective. When administrated in a rat model of myocardial infarction, this Y RNA fragment confers cardioprotection. Introduction Myocardial infarction (MI) affects > 7 million people in the United States alone (Mozaffarian et al, 2015). Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) (Smith et al, 2007; Kreke et al, 2012) show promise in mitigating MI damage: They can regenerate “irreversibly” injured myocardium by increasing viable tissue and decreasing scar size (Makkar et al, 2012; Malliaras et al, 2012, 2013b; Tseliou et al, 2013, 2014). The benefits are not limited to chronic injury. In both porcine and rat models of acute ischemia–reperfusion (I/R) injury (de Couto et al, 2015; Kanazawa et al, 2015), CDCs modulate the inflammatory response and confer cardioprotection. CDCs act by secreting lipid-bilayer vesicles known as extracellular vesicles (CDC-EVs) (Ibrahim et al, 2014). Exosomes are a specific subpopulation of small (~30–150 nm) EVs which are products of the endolysosomal pathway (Ibrahim & Marbán, 2016). These naturally occurring EVs harbor and transfer a diverse cargo of non-coding RNAs (including miRNAs) and proteins (Valadi et al, 2007), highlighting new means of cellular crosstalk with major implications for clinical therapeutics (Sahoo et al, 2011; Sahoo & Losordo, 2014; Emanueli et al, 2015; Khan et al, 2015; Ibrahim & Marbán, 2016; Kishore & Khan, 2016). We recently demonstrated that CDC-EVs are anti-fibrotic and angiogenic (Tseliou et al, 2015) and promote cardiomyocyte survival and proliferation following MI (Ibrahim et al, 2014), while identifying miR-146a as a highly enriched miRNA within CDC-EVs that promotes cardiac regeneration in vivo (Ibrahim et al, 2014). However, miRNAs comprise only a small portion of the RNA within exosomes and other EVs (Cheng et al, 2014b). One poorly understood class of non-coding RNA, the Y RNAs, is particularly plentiful in EVs (Valadi et al, 2007). These small (83–112 nucleotides) RNAs were first discovered in complex with ribonucleoproteins in the serum of patients suffering from lupus or Sjögren's syndrome (Hendrick et al, 1981; Lerner et al, 1981). Four distinct human Y RNAs share a characteristic stem-loop secondary structure and high sequence conservation between the upper and lower stem (Teunissen et al, 2000). In addition, the human genome contains > 1,000 Y pseudogenes (Jurka et al, 1988; O'Brien & Harley, 1992; Perreault et al, 2005). Here, we describe a Y RNA fragment (EV-YF1) highly enriched in CDC-EVs and show that this oligoribonucleotide affects gene expression to induce cytoprotection. Results Y RNA fragments are enriched in CDC-EVs Exosome-enriched EVs from six human CDC donors exhibited typical particle numbers and size distributions compared to normal human dermal fibroblast (NHDF) EVs (NHDF-EVs), as exemplified in Appendix Fig S1A and B. RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) of species up to 200 nucleotides in length revealed that CDC-EVs contain many small RNAs: Fig 1A shows a representative pie chart from one donor (OD220), and Fig 2A shows pooled data from six different CDC donors with distinct demographic properties (Table 1) but identical surface marker expression (Table 2). For comparison, Fig 1B shows the ncRNA distribution in NHDF-EVs (Ibrahim et al, 2014). EVs from the two cell types differ markedly in their RNA profiles, with a much greater dominance of tRNA in NHDF-EVs. The most abundant RNA species in CDC-EVs after tRNA is Y RNA (~20% of total RNA). Indeed, Y RNAs are much more plentiful than miRNAs, which represent only ~5% of the total RNA (Figs 1A and 2A). Figure 1. RNA content of CDC-EVs (day 5) A, B. Pie chart depicting the percent distribution of small RNA species in CDC-EVs (A) and NHDF-EVs (B), collected following 5 days of serum-free culture. C. Venn diagram depicting the number of unique and common Y RNA sequences in CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs. D. Graphical depictions of the abundance of the common Y RNA fragments in CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs according to the number of reads obtained by RNA-seq. Left graph: top three most abundant Y RNA fragments (linear scale). Right graph: the remaining 301 Y RNA fragments (logarithmic scale). E. Sequence alignment of each full-length human Y RNA (hY1, hY3, hY4, and hY5) with Y RNA fragments. Highlighted here are the top nine Y RNA fragments uniquely expressed in CDC-EVs (blue; 9/613 in C) and the top 10 commonly expressed between CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs (green; 10/304 in C). The most highly expressed Y RNA fragment (EV-YF1) is highlighted in orange. F. Proportion of Y RNA fragments derived from the 5′- or 3′-end of the four full-length human Y RNA genes. G, H. Relative expression of EV-YF1 by qPCR in CDCs and NHDFs (G) and their respective EVs (H). Results depict the mean ± SEM of two independent experiments, n = 6. Groups were compared using two-tailed, unpaired, Student's t-test; (G) **P = 0.0024; (H) ****P < 0.0001. Download figure Download PowerPoint Figure 2. CDC-EVs EV-YF1 content correlates with CDC potency in vivo Graph depicting the percent distribution of small RNA species in CDC-EVs from six different donors (as shown in Table 1). Horizontal lines represent the median value, box limits represent 75 and 25% percentile of the total values and the bars represent the maximal and minimal value. Graph representing the most abundant sequences expressed in OD220 CDC-EVs. EV-YF1: URS000072DA11; tRNA-1: URS00006FBEE8; tRNA-2: URS000072EF3B; tRNA-3: URS0000758E15; 28S rRNA: URS00003692B6; tRNA-4: URS000072CC66; 45S pre-rRNA: URS000025EB0F; tRNA-5: URS000072F18F; tRNA-6: URS000072F2C3; Yc: URS000072E641; tRNA-7: URS000072B56D; pre-mir-23a: URS000075EDA8; 28S rRNA 5: URS000075EC78; tRNA-8: URS0000701715; pre-mir-21: URS000075E5CC; long non-coding RNA (Mir17hg gene): URS000076343C; tRNA-9: URS00006A0CFD; tRNA-10: URS0000717173; pre-mir-12: URS00007A4AA9; tRNA-11: URS0000750232; tRNA-12: URS000072345A. Correlation between the percent change in ejection fraction (baseline 2 h post-MI to 21 days, ΔEF%) post-MI with CDC treatment (six different donors, n = 8 animals/donor) or placebo (n = 14 animals) and EV-YF1 abundance in CDC-EVs. Potent CDCs (ZCI, YKT, OD220) were delineated from non-potent CDCs (LO88, BM030, ZKN) by positive ΔEF%. Error bars represent the SEM of the delta ejection fraction % between animals treated with placebo, non-potent or potent CDCs, respectively. EV-YF1 abundance based on RNA-seq counts in EVs from potent (ZCI, YKT, OD220) and non-potent CDCs (LO88, BM030, ZKN) and NHDFs. Download figure Download PowerPoint Table 1. Demographic properties of human CDC donors Donor Age Sex Ethnicity Cause of death YKT 56 M Hispanic Head trauma BM030 27 F Caucasian Anoxia L088 64 M Caucasian Stroke ZCI 9 F Chinese Anoxia ZKN 26 F Hispanic Head trauma/MVA/blunt injury OD220 3 M Caucasian MVA MVA, Motor vehicle accident. Medical history was unremarkable in all donors except ZCl who had hydrocephalus due to craniometaphyseal dysplasia. Table 2. Phenotype of CDCs from different donors CD105 c-Kit CD31 CD90 CD45 DDR2 OD220 99.70% 2.90% 1.08% 25.30% 0.66% 6.67% YKT 99.80% 3.69% 1.28% 17.60% 0.52% 3.92% ZKN 99.90% 2.37% 2.15% 26.30% 1.13% 7.61% L088 99.90% 2.91% 4.51% 37.20% 0.76% 3.52% ZCI 99.70% 1.80% 0.87% 10.90% 0.79% 3.17% BM030 99.80% 2.88% 4.46% 51.2% 2.03% 1.28% Percentage of marker abundance expressed in CDCs from different donors obtained by flow cytometry. The abundance of Y RNAs in CDC-EVs motivated us to determine whether they play a role in mediating the effects of CDCs and CDC-EVs. RNA-seq revealed 917 Y RNA sequences in CDC-EVs and 345 in NHDF-EVs. The Y RNA sequences in both groups were fragments of Y RNA that varied in length (15–62 nt) (Fig 3A). Among those sequences, 613 were unique to CDC-EVs, 41 were unique to NHDF-EVs, and 304 were common to CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs (Fig 1C); unique Y RNA species were, however, very low in abundance in both types of EVs (< 1,000-fold the number of reads as for the shared species; cf. Fig 3B). The Y RNA fragments present in both CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs were generally more abundant in CDC-EVs (Fig 1D). As a case in point, the most plentiful Y RNA fragment in CDC-EVs (RNA central access: URS000072DA11; denoted herein as EV-YF1) was 15.7-fold more abundant in CDC-EVs than in NHDF-EVs (Fig 1D). Indeed, EV-YF1 is the single most abundantly expressed ncRNA species in CDC-EVs (Fig 2B). Figure 3. CDC-EVs Y RNA fragment length, distribution, and alignment Graph representing the nucleic acid length of the 304 common Y RNA fragments between CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs. Graphical depictions of the abundance of the five most abundant unique Y RNA fragments in CDC-EVs (left) and in NHDF-EVs (right) according to the number (Nb) of reads obtained by RNA-seq. Percentage of Y RNA fragments in CDC-EVs from different CDC donors derived from each full-length Y RNA (hY1, hY3, hY4, hY5). Sequence alignment between hY4 and EV-YF1 reveals a thymine insertion at position 16 in EV-YF1 (score: 99.0 bits, identities 56/57; 98%). Predicted secondary structures of EV-YF1 by UNAFold (dG: delta Gibbs free energy). Download figure Download PowerPoint Full-length human Y RNAs (hY) exhibit extensive sequence and structural conservation among members (van Gelder et al, 1994; Teunissen et al, 2000). Figure 1E shows BLAST sequence alignments of the four hY family members, the top 19 most abundant Y RNA fragments found only in CDC-EVs (Fig 1E, blue), and the top 10 most abundant Y RNA fragments found both in CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs (Fig 1E, green). Sixteen of the 19 Y RNA fragments aligned to or near the 5′ end of the four hY family members (Fig 1E and F); however, there was a particular enrichment in those homologous to hY4 (Fig 1F). To validate these findings, we examined all the Y RNA fragments within CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs and found that ~85% of all Y RNA fragments appeared to be derived from hY4 (Fig 3C). Based on these results, we opted to focus our attention on EV-YF1 because of its abundance. To confirm our RNA-seq data, we designed primers for EV-YF1 and analyzed its expression by qPCR in cells (CDCs and NHDFs; Fig 1G) and EVs (CDC-EVs and NHDF-EVs; Fig 1H). EV-YF1 expression was much greater in CDCs and CDC-EVs than in the respective NHDF controls (~10-fold, Fig 1G and H). The EV-YF1 fragment aligns well with the 5′ end of hY4 (98% homology, with the exception of an additional thymine [T] at position 16 in EV-YF1; Fig 3D). Thermodynamics-based UNAFold software (Markham & Zuker, 2008) yielded five energetically probable secondary structures for EV-YF1 (Fig 3E). While details of predicted structures differ, all share stem-loop motifs common in Y RNA species (Chen & Heard, 2013). Elevated EV-YF1 content within CDC-EVs correlates with in vivo CDC potency CDCs have a range of potency depending on the donor (age, gender, comorbidities, etc.) (Mishra et al, 2011; Cheng et al, 2014a). To test whether the abundance of EV-YF1 within CDC-EVs correlates with in vivo functional benefit of the parent CDCs, we utilized an established mouse model of MI (Ibrahim et al, 2014). Potent CDC lines (i.e., those which increased post-MI ejection fraction after intramyocardial injection compared to placebo (Appendix Fig S2)) produced EVs with a higher average abundance of EV-YF1 than non-potent CDCs (Fig 2C). While the CDC lines varied considerably in EV-YF1 abundance, the negative control NHDFs yielded EVs with the lowest expression of EV-YF1 (Fig 2D). Packaging and EV-mediated transfer of EV-YF1 To assess the transfer of EV-YF1 via CDC-EVs to target bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs), we transfected a fluorescently conjugated EV-YF1 (EV-YF1-fluo) (sequence in Table 3) into CDCs and then isolated CDC-EVs after 5 days in SF culture (Fig 4A). The same experiment was performed using NHDFs as a control (Appendix Fig S3). By immunocytochemistry (ICC), EV-YF1-fluo showed punctate signals within the cytoplasm of CDCs (Fig 4E); by qPCR, both CDCs and CDC-EVs revealed enhanced expression of EV-YF1 (Fig 4B and C). Together, these data demonstrated successful EV-YF1-fluo transfection into CDCs and packaging of EV-YF1-fluo into CDC-EVs (CDC-EVs [EV-YF1-fluo]). When we examined NHDFs and NHDF-EVs, we found that each expressed EV-YF1 (Appendix Fig S3A and B). Interestingly, the amount of EV-YF1 was significantly lower in NHDF-EVs than in CDC-EVs, which suggests that CDCs specifically package EV-YF1 into EVs (Appendix Fig S3B). Next, to determine whether EV-YF1-fluo could be transferred to target cells via CDC-EVs, we exposed BMDMs to CDC-EVs [EV-YF1-fluo] (Fig 4A). Two hours later, we observed punctate signals within the cytoplasm of BMDM (Fig 4F) and enhanced EV-YF1 expression (Fig 4D); this expression pattern was also observed in BMDMs treated with NHDF-EVs (Appendix Fig S3C). Following exposure to CDC-EVs directly transfected with EV-YF1-fluo, BMDMs took up EV-YF1-fluo (Fig 4G–I); this could also be achieved by direct EV-YF1-fluo transfection (Fig 4J–L). Based on ICC, EV-YF1 did not overlap with the mitochondrial network within CDCs or BMDMs (Fig 4E and F). Although we did not detect EV-YF1-fluo in the nuclei of CDCs or BMDMs, we cannot exclude the possibility that dispersed molecules of EV-YF1-fluo, not forming visible clumps, may be present within the nucleus with a weak fluorescent intensity undetectable by ICC. Table 3. Oligoribonucleotide sequences Ys 5′-GAUGUUAUUAUCGUAGUAGAUGAAUAAUCGGUGCUACGAUUAUGAGUGUCAGUCGCC-3′ EV-YF1 5′-GGCUGGUCCGAUGGUUAGUGGGUUAUCAGAACUUAUUAACAUUAGUGUCACUAAAGU-3′ EV-YF1-fluo 5′-/5RhoR-XN/GGCUGGUCCGAUGGUUAGUGGGUUAUCAGAACUUAUUAACAUUAGUGUCACUAAAGU-3′ Figure 4. Cytoplasmic localization and expression of EV-YF1-fluo A. Schematic of the protocol for EV-YF1-fluo transfection into CDCs (OD220 donor) followed by the collection and treatment of CDC-EVs into BMDMs. B–D. Expression of EV-YF1 by qPCR in CDCs (B), CDC-EVs (C), and BMDMs (D) described in (A). Results depict the mean ± SEM of n = 3. E, F. Representative images of EV-YF1-fluo-transfected CDCs (E) and BMDMs treated with CDC-EVs (F). Fluorescently conjugated EV-YF1 (red, EV-YF1-fluo), MitoTracker Green FM (green, MitoT); DAPI (blue). G–L. Schematic of the protocol for BMDMs treated with directly transfected CDC-EVs (G) or transfected with EV-YF1-fluo (J). Immunocytochemical staining reveals punctate, cytoplasmic localization of EV-YF1-fluo (red) in BMDMs following treatment with directly transfected CDC-EVs (H) or transfection with EV-YF1-fluo (K). BMDMs in (H and K) were stained with CD45 (green) and DAPI (blue). (I and L) EV-YF1 expression in BMDMs following treatments described in conditions (G and J), respectively, compared to their Ys (scrambled oligoribonucleotide) control. Results depict the mean ± SEM of n = 3. Data information: (B–D, I, L) Groups were compared using two-tailed, unpaired, Student's t-test; (B) **P = 0.0013; (C) **P = 0.0059; (D) **P = 0.0019; (I) **P = 0.002; (L) **P = 0.0034). (E, F, H, K) Scale bars: 10 μm. Download figure Download PowerPoint IL-10 expression is induced by EV-YF1 CDCs limit infarct size in rats by polarizing macrophages (Mϕ) toward a distinct, cytoprotective phenotype (de Couto et al, 2015). Exposure of BMDMs to CDC-EVs yielded changes in gene expression similar to those described after transwell culture with CDCs (de Couto et al, 2015) (Fig 5A). To determine whether EV-YF1 modulates gene expression, we transfected EV-YF1 or a scrambled oligoribonucleotide control [Ys] (sequence in Table 3) into BMDMs. EV-YF1 recapitulated some, but not all, of the effects of CDC-EVs (Fig 5B). Most strikingly, we found that EV-YF1 induced an 18-fold increase in Il10 gene expression relative to Ys within 18 h of transfection (Fig 5C), an effect sustained for at least 72 h (Appendix Fig S4A). These findings were in contrast to those observed when BMDMs were treated with LPS, where Il10 gene expression rapidly decreased after 72 h (Appendix Fig S4A). Consistent with the increased Il10 transcript levels (Fig 5C), the secretion of IL-10 protein was enhanced in EV-YF1-primed (compared to Ys-primed) BMDMs 48 and 72 h post-transduction (Fig 5D). Although EV-YF1 also increased the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines Nos2 and Tnf-α, the upregulation was weaker than for Il10 (~sevenfold and twofold, respectively). While LPS also induced secretion of IL-10 in BMDMs (Appendix Fig S4B), Nos2 increased much less in EV-YF1-primed BMDMs than in M1 Mϕ (LPS treatment) (Fig 5A and B). Figure 5. EV-YF1 modulates IL-10 expression Gene expression profile by qPCR of BMDMs polarized toward M1 (IFNγ and LPS), M2 (IL-4 and IL-13) or treated with CDC-EVs (versus untreated control BMDM, dotted line). Results depict the mean ± SEM of two independent experiments, n = 3 each. Statistical significance was determined using multiple t-tests followed by Holm–Sidak's multiple corrections test; *P < 0.05. Gene expression profile by qPCR of BMDMs primed with EV-YF1 or Ys (versus untreated control BMDM, dotted line). Results depict the mean ± SEM of two independent experiments, n = 3 each. Statistical significance was determined using multiple t-tests followed by Holm–Sidak's multiple corrections test; *P < 0.05. Gene expression of Il10 in BMDMs following transfection with EV-YF1 or Ys, as determined by qPCR. Results depict the mean ± SEM of two independent experiments, n = 6 each. Groups were compared using two-tailed, unpaired, Student's t-test; **P < 0.0044. Protein secretion of IL-10 from BMDMs at 24, 48, and 72 h following transfection with EV-YF1 or Ys, by ELISA. Results depict the mean ± SEM of an experiment representative of two independent experiments, n = 6 each. Groups were compared using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparisons test; ****P < 0.0001. Download figure Download PowerPoint Cardioprotective role of EV-YF1 IL-10 is well recognized as an endogenous cardioprotective cytokine in I/R (Yang et al, 2000; Bolger et al, 2002; Stumpf et al, 2008). To determine the functional consequence(s) of increased IL-10 secretion in EV-YF1-primed BMDMs, we mimicked I/R in vitro (de Couto et al, 2015). Neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs) were stressed with 75 μM H2O2 for 15 min (simulating an ischemic phase) and then washed with SF media for 20 min (simulating reperfusion), prior to the addition of EV-YF1- or Ys-primed BMDMs in the presence or absence of anti-IL-10 neutralizing antibody (αIL-10). Stressed (H2O2) and unstressed NRVMs served as comparators (Fig 6A). NRVM apoptosis was reduced in coculture with EV-YF1-primed BMDMs (TUNEL+α-actinin+: 24%, versus Ys-primed BMDMs or NRVMs alone: TUNEL+α-actinin+: ~45%) (Fig 6B and C). The protective effects of EV-YF1-primed BMDMs were strong, as the percentage of apoptosis decreased to a level comparable to that in unstressed NRVMs (TUNEL+α-actinin+: 20%). The addition of recombinant IL-10 (rIL-10) to stressed NRVMs (without BMDM) mimicked the benefits of coculture with EV-YF1-primed BMDMs (TUNEL+α-actinin+: 24%) (Fig 6B and C). The protective effects of either EV-YF1-primed BMDMs or rIL-10 were abrogated by αIL-10 neutralizing antibody (Fig 6B and C). To test whether EV-YF1 influences cardiomyocyte survival in the absence of macrophages, we treated NRVMs with EV-YF1 or Ys and noted a slight, but significant, protective response to oxidative stress (Appendix Fig S5). Taken together, the data support the hypothesis that enhanced secretion of IL-10 from EV-YF1-primed BMDMs underlies the cytoprotection of oxidatively stressed cardiomyocytes. Figure 6. EV-YF1-primed BMDMs induce IL-10 and protect cardiomyocytes from oxidative stress Schematic of in vitro protocol. NRVMs were cultured with or without 75 μM H2O2 (15 min), media was replaced with serum-free media (SF) (20 min), and then, Ys- or EV-YF1-primed BMDMs were added in coculture [or recombinant IL-10 (rIL-10, 10 ng/ml) was added]. Six hours later, cells were analyzed for apoptosis. Mean of 2–4 independent experiments in four different wells/experiment. Representative images of the cells in (A), stained for TUNEL (green), α-actinin (red), CD45 (white), and DAPI (blue). Scale bars: 10 μm. Pooled analyses of TUNEL+ cardiomyocytes (CM). Graphs depict mean ± SEM of 4 replicates. Groups were compared using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparisons test; †P-values: versus H2O2 treatment (positive control); *P-values: between treatment groups. Download figure Download PowerPoint If EV-mediated transfer of EV-YF1 contributes to CDC-mediated cardioprotection (de Couto et al, 2015), in vivo transfection of EV-YF1 would logically be predicted to mitigate I/R injury. We tested this notion in rats subjected to 45 min of ischemia and 10 min of reperfusion. By random allocation, hearts were then infused with 10 μg of EV-YF1, Ys, or vehicle, with infarct size quantification 2 days later (Fig 7A). Cardiac tissue expression of EV-YF1, assessed 1 h following injection, revealed a 20-fold increase in EV-YF1-treated hearts compared to vehicle controls (Appendix Fig S6A). Animals treated with EV-YF1 exhibited reduced infarct mass (EV-YF1: 24.30 ± 2.85 mg, Ys: 67.41 ± 10.9 mg, vehicle: 78.33 ± 4.43 mg) (Fig 7B and C), a decrease in the number of CD68 + macrophages within the infarct area (EV-YF1: 55.41 ± 1.01%, Ys: 71.33 ± 1.65%, vehicle: 73.35 ± 4.12%; Fig 7D and Appendix Fig S7A), and a decrease in the frequency of apoptotic cardiomyocytes (EV-YF1: 5.08 ± 1.33%, Ys: 16.16 ± 2.44%, vehicle: 13.63 ± 2.3%; Fig 7E and Appendix Fig S7B) compared to animals treated with Ys or vehicle. Additionally, the expression of Il10 was detectable 24 h later in the hearts of animals treated with EV-YF1; no expression of Il10 could be detected in the hearts of animals that had been treated with Ys or vehicle (Appendix Fig S6B). Thus, the cytoprotective effects of EV-YF1 seen in vitro (Fig 6) are also manifested in vivo in a genuine MI model. Figure 7. EV-YF1 is cardioprotective against I/R injury in rats Schematic representation of in vivo I/R protocol. Representative TTC-stained hearts from animals at 48 h following I/R injury. Quantitative measurements of TTC-stained hearts, depicted as infarct mass (n = 5–6 rats per group). Graphs depict mean ± SEM. Groups were compared using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparisons test; vehicle versus EV-YF1: ***P = 0.0003; Ys versus EV-YF1: **P = 0.0014. Pooled analysis of CD68+ cells within the infarct tissue 48 h following I/R injury. Graphs depict mean ± SEM (n = 3 rats per group). Groups were compared using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparisons test; vehicle versus EV-YF1: **P = 0.007; Ys versus EV-YF1: *P = 0.0123. Pooled analysis of TUNEL+ cardiomyocytes (CM) within the infarct tissue 48 h following I/R injury. Graphs depict mean ± SEM (n = 3 rats per group). Groups were compared using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple comparisons test; vehicle versus EV-YF1: *P = 0.0377; Ys versus EV-YF1: **P = 0.0075. Download figure Download PowerPoint Discussion Patients who survive a large MI often progress to heart failure (Thune et al, 2011; Kikkert et al, 2014). To date, CDCs are the only cell type capable of increasing myocardial viability following both acute injury (cardioprotection) (de Couto et al, 2015) and established MI (regeneration) (Malliaras et al, 2013a,b). CDC-EVs mediate CDC-induced cardioprotection and regeneration (Ibrahim et al, 2014). Here, we have (i) discovered that Y RNA fragments comprise the largest small RNA component within CDC-EVs; (ii) identified EV-YF1 as the most abundantly expressed Y RNA fragment; and (iii) assigned unprecedented bioactivity to this fragment, in vitro and in vivo. Several RNA-seq analyses of eukaryotic cells have revealed an abundance of small RNA fragments of unknown function. Increasing evidence suggests that some of these RNA fragments, which are likely derived from longer non-coding RNAs (Röther & Meister, 2011), can be functional in both healthy and diseased cells (Hall & Dalmay, 2
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