Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are a heterogeneous population of cells that proliferate in vitro as plastic-adherent cells, have a fibroblast-like morphology, form colonies in vitro and can differentiate into bone, cartilage and fat cells. The abundance, ease and repeatable access to subcutaneous adipose tissue and the simple isolation procedures provide clear advantages for the use of human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hASDCs) in clinical applications. We screened microRNAs (miRNAs) that affected the proliferation and survival of hADSCs. Transfection of miR-302d mimic increased cell proliferation and protected cells from oxidant-induced cell death in hADSCs, which was supported by flow-cytometric analysis. miR-302d did not affect the expression of Bcl-2 family members or anti-oxidant molecules. The Nrf2-Keap1 system, which is one of the major mechanisms for the cellular defense against oxidative stress, was not altered by transfection of miR-302d mimic. To identify the target of the miR-302d actions on proliferation and survival of hADSCs, a microarray analysis was performed using miR-302d-overexpressing hADSCs. Real-time PCR analysis showed that transfection of miR-302d mimic inhibited the CDKN1A and CCL5 expression. Downregulation of CDKN1A with a specific siRNA mimicked the effect of miR-302d on hADSCs proliferation, but did not affect miR-302d-induced cell survival. Downregulation of CCL5 protected oxidant-induced cell death as miR-302d, inhibited oxidant-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and the addition of recombinant CCL5 inhibited the protective action of miR-302d on oxidant-induced cell death. This study indicates that miR-302 controls proliferation and cell survival of hADSCs through different targets and that this miRNA can be used to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of hADSCs transplantation in vivo.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are endogenous 20- to 25-nucleotide-long non-coding RNAs that bind to their targets through partial sequence complementary within the 3′-untranslated region (UTR) or open reading frame (ORF) of coding mRNAs.1 These binding events result in either the degradation of the mRNA or the inhibition of translation, thereby modulating the expression of miRNA targets.1 miRNAs have been implicated in many processes, including cell proliferation, apoptosis,2, 3 fat metabolism,2 neuronal patterning4 and tumorigenesis.5 miR-302 is a family of eight miRNAs, which includes miR-302a, miR-302a*, miR-302b, miR-302b*, miR-302c, miR-302c*, miR-302d and miR-367. The first seven of these miRNAs constitute the miR-302 family and have a highly conserved sequence. These miRNAs are highly expressed in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), and their expression levels rapidly decline as pluripotent stem cells begin to differentiate.6 These observations suggest that the miR-302 family of miRNAs may have a role in the maintenance of pluripotency or self-renewal. Recent studies have shown that the ESC-specific cell cycle-regulating (ESCC) family of miRNAs, which includes miR-302, enhances the reprogramming of mouse and human somatic cells to iPSCs.7, 8, 9 miR-302 is also expressed in various normal cell types. Kumar et al.10 reported that miR-302 levels were significantly decreased in quiescent and irradiated AG01522 normal human fibroblast (NHF) cells, which indicate a regulatory role for miR-302 in fibroblasts quiescence and proliferation. Kang et al.11 showed that miR-302 targets the 3′- UTR of type II BMP receptor transcripts and leads to the downregulation of BMP signaling in human primary pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells. Recent studies have shown that miR-302 targets epigenetic regulators (AOF1/2, MECP1-p66, MECP2 and MBD2),7 cell-cycle regulators (Cyclin D1/D2, CDK2, BMI-1 and PTEN),12, 13 TGF-β regulators (Lefty1/2 and TGFBR2),8, 14 BMP inhibitors (DAZAP2, SLAIN1, and TOB2)12 and NR2F2.15 Most studies about the role of miR-302 have been done in ESCs, but the function of miR-302 in mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) has not been studied.
Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADSCs) share many of the characteristics of their counterparts in bone marrow, including an extensive proliferative potential and the ability to differentiate toward adipogenic, osteogenic, chondrogenic and myogenic lineages.16, 17, 18 We have shown that miRNAs control the proliferation and differentiation of hADSCs.19, 20 In this study, we therefore examined the role of miR-302 in hADSCs proliferation and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced cell death. Our results showed that miR-302 increases the proliferation of hADSCs and inhibits their oxidant-induced cell death, which may be mediated by targeting CDKN1A and CCL5.
Results
miR-302s promote proliferation of human MSCs
Figure 1a shows that miR-302 members (302a, 302b, 302c, and 302d) share a high sequence homology, differing only in the 3′ hexanucleotides. We determined the effect of miR-302 on the proliferation of MSCs. Direct cell counting showed that the transfection of miR-302a, b, c and d mimics in hADSCs (Figure 1b) and human bone marrow MSCs (hBMSCs) (Supplementary Figure 1a) increased their proliferation rate. The effects did not show any statistical significance among miR-302 members. Colony-forming unit (CFU) assay showed that the overexpression of miR-302s in hADSCs increased the number of CFU (Figure 1c). Cell-cycle analysis by flow cytometry demonstrated that the overexpression of miR-302 a, b, c and d increased the relative fraction of hADSCs in S phase but decreased the relative fraction of hADSCs in G0/G1 phase without affecting G2/M phase (Figure 1d). In cell proliferation assay and cell-cycle analysis, miR-302d showed the most consistent effect among miR-302 members. Therefore, we used miR-302d in the following experiment. The transfection of mir-302d mimic did not affect osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation of hADSCs (Supplementary Figure 1b).
miR-302s protect hADSCs from oxidant-induced cell death
We discovered during these experiments that miR-302d-transfected cells survived well in response to stress conditions such as oligonucleotide transfection. We therefore determined the effect of miR-302s on cell survival under oxidative stress which is induced by the treatment of ROS inducers, cobalt chloride (CoCl2) and 3-morpholinosydnonimine hydrochloride (SIN-1). Because cell density affected oxidant-induced cell death in preliminary studies, we determined the effect of 100 and 200 μM of CoCl2 and 5 and 10 mM of SIN-1 on cell viability in confluence state of hADSCs. The treatment of CoCl2 and SIN-1 in hADSCs increased cell death in a dose-dependent manner after 24 h treatment. The transfection of miR-302s significantly protected cells from death that was induced by CoCl2 and SIN-1 (Figure 2a). We next determined the proportion of subG1 phase in miR-302d-transfected cells with CoCl2 and SIN-1 because apoptotic cells with fragmented DNA can be identified by their subG1-DNA content. Flow-cytometric analyses showed that the treatment of CoCl2 and SIN-1 for 24 h in confluence state of hADSCs increased the proportion of subG1 phase cells, and that miR-302d transfection decreased the subG1 population in the presence of CoCl2 and SIN-1 (Figure 2b; Supplementary Figure 2). Annexin V staining, which is an early hallmark of apoptotic cell death,21 showed that transfection of miR-302d mimic decreased the proportion of Annexin V(+), propidium iodide (PI) (+) cells in the presence of 100 μM CoCl2 and 5 mM SIN-1 in hADSCs (Figure 2c). We then determined the effects of miR-302d on ROS generation by H2-DCFDA, which detect the overall oxidative stress including hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radicals. miR-302d transfection significantly decreased the generation of ROS by 100 μM CoCl2 or 5 mM SIN-1 in hADSCs (Figure 2d), indicating that the protective action of miR-302 on oxidant-induced cell death may be related to the inhibition of ROS generation.
Pro- and anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 members and anti-oxidant mechanisms are not involved in the protection effect of miR-302d
To investigate the molecular mechanisms of the miR-302d-induced protection of cell death, we examined the expression of several apoptosis regulatory proteins. Western blot analysis of the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL and pro-apoptotic proteins Bad, Bak and Bax showed that the expression of these proteins was not altered by the transfection of miR-302d (Supplementary Figure 3). We next determined the expression of anti-oxidant molecules in hADSCs. Real-time PCR analysis showed that the transfection of miR-302d did not affect the expression of a number of anti-oxidant molecules, including superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and glutathione S-transferase (GST). We also determined the expression of anti-oxidant genes in the presence of 100 μM CoCl2 or 5 mM SIN-1. The treatment of CoCl2 or SIN-1 increased the expression of SOD1, SOD2, GPX1, GPX4, GST omega 1, and the transfection of miR-302d inhibited CoCl2-induced increase in SOD1 and SOD2 (Supplementary Figure 4a). Another important anti-oxidant mechanism is controlled by the Keap1/Nrf2 pathway.22 We assessed the mRNA expression of Nrf2 and Keap1 by real-time PCR and we did not observe a change in the expression of these genes (Figure 3a). The treatment of CoCl2 increased hemoxygenase-1 (HO-1) expression, one of the major anti-oxidant enzyme and its expression is regulated by Nrf2,23 but the quantitation of western blot experiments showed that the transfection of miR-302d did not affect HO-1, Nrf2, phospho Nrf2 or Keap1 levels in the absence or presence of 100 μM CoCl2 (Figure 3b). The downregulation of Nrf2 expression by the specific siRNA (Figure 3c) also did not affect miR-302d-induced protection of CoCl2-induced cell death (Figure 3d).
Downregulation of CDKN1A by miR-302d promotes the proliferation of hADSCs, but does not protect oxidant-induced cell death
To determine the targets of miR-302d in hADSCs, we searched for candidate gene targets using the miRWalk database, which allows for the search for interaction information from eight established miRNA target prediction programs (RNA22, miRanda, miRDB, TargetScan, RNAhybrid, PITA, PICTAR and Diana-microT). We also examined miR-302d-induced changes in gene expression of hADSCs by microarray analysis. We found 23 genes, which regulate cell cycle or oxidative stress, among 300 genes of which expression was downregulated >2-fold (Table 1). Among the predicted targets, we focused on CDKN1A (also known as p21), because it increases in response to oxidative stress24 and has a major role in cell-cycle arrest.25 Real-time PCR and western blot analysis showed that the transfection of miR-302d mimic decreased CDKN1A (also p21 expression) expression, and that the transfection of miR-302d inhibitor increased CDKN1A (also p21 expression) expression (Figures 4a and c–e). To determine the role of CDKN1A in the action of miR-302d, we examined the effect of CDKN1A siRNA on proliferation and cell death. The transfection of CDKN1A siRNA decreased its expression significantly at mRNA and protein levels (Figures 4b, d, and e), increased the proliferation of hADSCs (Figure 4f), and mitigated the modulation of hADSCs proliferation by miR-302d inhibitor (Figure 4g). We also determined the effect of miR-302d on the expression of cell cycle-related genes. The transfection of miR-302d increased the expression of CDK2, CDK6, cyclin A2, cyclin B1, cyclin B2 and cyclin D3 without affecting the expression of cyclin D1 and cyclin E1 (Supplementary Figure 5). In contrast, the transfection of CDKN1A siRNA did not affect CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced cell death in hADSCs (Figure 4h). We determined the effect of miR-302d on CDKN1A expression in the absence or presence of CoCl2 and SIN-1. The treatment of CoCl2 and SIN-1 increased CDKN1A expression in control miRNA or miR-302d-transfected cells (Figure 4i). To determine whether miR-302d directly binds to 3'UTR of CDKN1A, we used luciferase reporter vector that contains a putative miR-302d binding sequence of CDKN1A 3'UTR. Cells were transfected with a luciferase construct in which the miR-302 target site from the CDKN1A 3'UTR was inserted exhibited significantly lower luciferase activity in miR-302 mimic-transfected hADSCs than in control miRNA-transfected cells (Figure 4j), indicating that miR-302d directly targets 3'UTR of CDKN1A.
Table 1. Gene expression profile of miR-302d-overexpressing hADSCs.
Gene symbol | Gene name | Fold change |
---|---|---|
CYBRD1 | Cytochrome b reductase 1 | −18.41 |
TGFBR2 | Transforming growth factor, beta receptor II (70/80 kDa) | −8.66 |
FOXQ1 | Forkhead box Q1 | −5.32 |
RPS6KA2 | Ribosomal protein S6 kinase, 90 kDa, polypeptide 2 | −3.32 |
ZNF25 | Zinc finger protein 25 | −3.17 |
SDC1 | Syndecan 1 | −3.03 |
TMOD2 | Tropomodulin 2 (neuronal) | −3.02 |
LOXL3 | Lysyl oxidase-like 3 | −2.91 |
CDC2L6 | Cell division cycle 2-like 6 (CDK8-like) | −2.89 |
GPSM2 | G-protein signaling modulator 2 (AGS3-like, C. elegans) | −2.87 |
VLDLR | Very low density lipoprotein receptor | −2.72 |
TNFRSF10B | Tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, member 10b | −2.71 |
PON2 | Paraoxonase 2 | −2.68 |
SCD5 | Stearoyl-CoA desaturase 5 | −2.38 |
OXR1 | Oxidation resistance 1 | −2.38 |
CYB5R4 | Cytochrome b5 reductase 4 | −2.27 |
SYDE1 | Synapse defective 1, Rho GTPase, homolog 1 (C. elegans) | −2.25 |
MAFB | v-maf musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene homolog B (avian) | −2.22 |
CDKN1A | Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (p21, Cip1) | −2.21 |
SLFN11 | Schlafen family member 11 | −2.19 |
COX7A1 | Cytochrome c oxidase subunit VIIa polypeptide 1 (muscle) | −2.15 |
HMOX1 | Heme oxygenase (decycling) 1 | −2.12 |
PLOD2 | Procollagen-lysine, 2-oxoglutarate 5-dioxygenase 2 | −2.09 |
Transfection of miR-302d significantly downregulated 23 cell-cycle and oxidative stress-related genes compared with miR-control-transfected cells
miR-302d-mediated repression of CCL5 reduces oxidant-induced cell death in hADSCs
CCL5, which was one of important target of miR-302s-induced regulation of human fibroblasts proliferation,10 has been reported to be activated by xanthine oxidase-mediated ROS production in murine mesangial cells26 and to produce hydrogen peroxide in human eosinophils.27 Real-time PCR analysis and enzyme-linked immunosorbent analysis (ELISA) showed that transfection of miR-302d mimic suppressed CCL5 mRNA levels and protein levels in hADSCs (Figures 5a and b). Then, we determined the effect of the downregulation of CCL5 expression. The transfection of CCL5 siRNA in hADSCs inhibited CCL5 mRNA and protein levels (Figures 5c and d). Downregulation of CCL5 expression did not affect basal and miR-302-induced increase in hADSCs proliferation (Figure 5e). We next tested whether the protective effects of miR-302 against oxidant injury were mediated by the suppression of CCL5 expression. Cell viability assay revealed that downregulation of CCL5 via siR-CCL5 decreased CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced cell death like transfection of miR-302d, and cotransfection of miR-302d and CCL5 siRNA further increased cell viability (Figure 5f). Using real-time PCR analysis (Figure 5g) and ELISA (Figure 5h), we confirmed that CoCl2 and SIN-1 treatment upregulated CCL5 expression in hADSCs, and that transfection of miR-302d reduced oxidant-induced increase in CCL5 expression and the CCL5 siRNA and miR-302d-cotransfected cells showed lower CCL5 protein level than that of miR-302d-transfected cells. Transfection with siR-CCL5 also decreased CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced ROS generation (Figure 5j). To confirm the role of CCL5 in miR-302d-induced protection of cell death, we determined the effect of recombinant CCL5 (Figure 5i). The addition of recombinant CCL5 (5 μg/ml) increased CoCl2-induced cell death and inhibited miR-302-induced protection of CoCl2-induced cell death in hADSCs. Bioinformatic analysis showed that 3'UTR of CCL5 mRNA contains a putative target site for miR-302d, as described by Kumar et al.10 To determine whether miR-302d directly binds to 3'UTR of CCL5, we used luciferase reporter vector that contains a putative miR-302d binding sequence of CCL5 3'UTR. Cells were transfected with a luciferase construct in which the miR-302 target site from the CCL5 3'UTR was inserted exhibited similar luciferase activity in miR-302 mimic-transfected hADSCs with that in control miRNA-transfected cells (Supplementary Figure 6).
Discussion
miR-302s are highly expressed in ESCs and have an important role in the self-renewal and pluripotency of ESCs. However, the effect of miR-302 on cell proliferation is variable depending on the cell type. miR-302 suppressed cell proliferation in various cancer cells28, 29, 30 and tumorigenicity of human ES cells,15 whereas the overexpression of miR-302 increased the fraction of S-phase cells in an NHF cell line.10 Cell counting and cell-cycle analysis in this study showed that the transfection of miR-302 mimic increased the proliferation of hADSCs and the fraction of S phase, but decreased Go/G1 phase (Figure 1). A similar change by miR-302a in cell-cycle analysis showed in NHFs,31 although they have not determined whether overexpression of miR-302a increased the proliferation of NHFs. We also observed an increase in expression of cyclin A, cyclin B, CDK2 and CDK6 mRNA (Supplementary Figure 5). In contrast, miR-302 has been reported to have multiple cell-cycle targets in ESCs, including the stem cell-related genes Oct4/Sox2 and NR2F2, cyclin D1, CDK2 and CDKN1A.8, 13, 15 This discrepancy can be explained by the findings that miRNAs act independently in different cell types, perhaps through the repression of different target genes.20 The final biological effects of miRNAs strongly depend on the repertoire of miRNAs, mRNA targets, and their expression level, and the same miRNA may have opposite roles in different cellular context.32 Chen et al.33 reported that mir-181 showed the differential effects on differentiation of B cells (CD19+) and cytotoxic T cells (CD8+), which are not developmentally linked during hematopoietic lineage commitment. The pro-senescence role of miR-20a34 and miR-29035 in mouse embryonic fibroblasts is in contrast with their proliferative role in tumor and ESCs.36, 37 All of these findings indicated that miR-302s increase proliferation of hADSCs. miR-302 has been reported to have multiple cell-cycle targets in ESCs, including the stem cell-related genes Oct4/Sox2 and NR2F2, cyclin D1, CDK2 and CDKN1A.8, 13, 15 In this study, microarray analysis showed that miR-302d inhibited CDKN1A expression (Table 1), and this result was confirmed by real-time PCR and western blotting (Figures 4a and d). The p21 (CIP1/WAF1) protein binds to and inhibits the activity of cyclin-CDK2, -CDK1, and -CDK4/6 complexes and thus functions as a regulator of cell-cycle progression during G1 phase.38 A role for CDKN1A in the miR-302-induced increase in cell proliferation was supported by the findings that the downregulation of CDKN1A expression increased the proliferation of hADSCs and blocked the action of miR-302d mimic and inhibitor in hADSCs proliferation (Figures 4f and g). Our study using luciferase construct showed that miR-302 directly binds to 3'UTR of CDKN1A mRNA (Figure 4j). It has been shown that miR-302 binds directly to the 3'-UTR of CDKN1A mRNA in mouse ES cells39 and human ES cells.40 These data indicated that miR-302-induced proliferation in hADSCs is mediated by the targeting of CDKN1A mRNA. Kumar et al.10 reported that CCL5 has an important role in miR302-induced fibroblast proliferation. Although we also observed that miR-302d inhibited CCL5 expression, we did not observe an increase in hADSCs proliferation following transfection of CCL5 siRNA (Figure 5e). The role of CCL5 in cell proliferation is variable and depends on cell types. CCL5 increased cell proliferation in MCF-7 cells41 but inhibited proliferation in human fibroblasts.10 Thus, the discrepancy of the results may be related to the cell types that were used in these experiments.
The most important finding of this study is that miR-302 protects hADSCs from CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced cell death. Flow-cytometric analysis showed that miR-302d inhibited apoptotic cell death that was induced by CoCl2 and SIN-1(Figures 2b and c). CoCl2, which is a chemical hypoxia agent, generates ROS.42, 43 SIN-1 simultaneously produces peroxide radicals and NO, which results in the production of peroxynitrite.44 ROS determination using fluorescent dyes showed that miR-302 transfection inhibited SIN-1- and CoCl2-induced ROS generation and basal ROS levels (Figure 2d), indicating that the miR-302d action is related to diminution of ROS generation. In this study, the CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced hADSCs death was not inhibited by transfection of CDKN1A siRNA (Figure 4h), although the treatment of CoCl2 or SIN-1 increased CDKN1A expression (Figure 4i). The role of CDKN1A on cell death is variable according to experimental conditions. It has been reported that CDKN1A involved in 5-aza-2-deoxycytidine-induced cell death in human prostate cancer cells,45 epigallocatechin-3-gallate-induced apoptosis46 and C(2)-ceraminde-induced apoptosis in mouse embryonic fibroblasts.47 In contrast, CDKN1A inhibited hyperoxia-induced cell death in H1299 human lung adenocarcinoma cells,48 apoptosis during DNA replication fork stress,49 and shikonin-induced apoptosis.50 The negative effect of CDKN1A siRNA on oxidant-induced cell death in this experiment may also be related to incomplete knockdown of CDKN1A expression. To exclude the role of CDKN1A on miR-302d-mediated protection of hADSCs, we have to use complete knockdown cells of CDKN1A gene.
In this study, in addition to inhibiting CCL5 expression by miR-302d mimic (Figures 5a and b), we observed that the CoCl2-induced increase in CCL5 expression was inhibited by miR302d (Figures 5g and h) and that CCL5 siRNA transfection resulted in a protection against CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced cell death (Figure 5f). The transfection of CCL5 siRNA also inhibited CoCl2- and SIN-1-induced ROS generation (Figure 5j) and the addition of recombinant CCL5 inhibited miR-302d-induced protection about oxidant-induced cell death (Figure 5i). An ROS-induced increase in CCL5 expression was also reported in airway epithelial cells51 and a human fibroblast cell line.10 A reduction in tissue injury by CCL5 inhibition has been reported in myocardial reperfusion injury.52 All of these findings indicate that the inhibition of oxidant-induced cell death by miR-302d is mediated in part by the inhibition of CCL5. The luciferase assay using a construct which contains a putative miR-302d target site of CCL5 3'UTR failed to show direct binding of miR-302d to CCL5 3'UTR (Supplementary Figure 6). However, Kumar et al.10 showed that miR-302a overexpression inhibited luciferase activity in the experiment using a construct to which 400 bp of 3'UTR of CCL5 was cloned. Therefore, this discrepancy may be resulted from the possibility that the construct to be used in the experiment may contain another binding site for miR-302.
The regulation of intracellular ROS levels has a critical role in maintaining stemness, the differentiation of stem cells, and the pathogenesis of stem cell-related diseases.53, 54 The low level of ROS in stem cells is maintained by the high level of expression of anti-oxidant genes, enhanced DNA double-strand break repair and the expression of heat-shock proteins. The findings of this study suggest that high levels of miR-302 in pluripotent stem cells may also contribute to anti-oxidant defense in stem cells and that regulation of redox status by miR-302 in stem cells may have important roles in the regulation of stem cell self-renewal and fate.
In conclusion, miR-302 regulates proliferation and protects against oxidant-induced cell death. These actions are mediated by the target genes CDKN1A and CCL5. The modulation of miR-302 may be a novel strategy to protect against ischemic tissue injury and/or to enhance the survival of transplanted stem cells.
Materials and Methods
Cell culture
All protocols involving human subjects were approved by the Institutional Review Board of Pusan National University. Superfluous materials were collected from four individuals undergoing elective abdominoplasty after informed consent was given by each individual. The hADSCs were isolated according to the methods described in previous studies.55 hADSCs were maintained in low-glucose DMEM with 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 μg/ml streptomycin and 100 U/ml penicillin in 5% CO2 environment at 37 °C. hBMSCs were maintained in α-MEM with 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 μg/ml streptomycin and 100 U/ml penicillin in 5% CO2 environment at 37 °C.
Reagents
CoCl2 and SIN-1 were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Recombinant human CCL5 was purchased from R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN, USA).
miRNA, siRNA transfection
hADSCs were seeded with complete medium without antibiotics. On the following day, miR-302 (Dharmacon, Thermo Scientific, Epsom, UK) at a final concentration of 20 nM and/or siRNA (on-TARGET plus SMART pool, Thermo Scientific, Epsom, UK) for NFE2L2 (Nrf2), CDKN1A and CCL5 at a final concentration of 100 nM were transfected to hADSCs using DharmaFECT 1 (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL, USA) reagent according to the manufacturer's protocol. miRNA negative control or non-targeting siRNA was transfected as a negative control.
Proliferation and colony-forming unit assay
hADSCs were transfected with each miRNA and/or siRNA. After 48 h incubation, cells were seeded in 6-well plates at a density of 1 × 104 cells/well. In all, 2, 4 and 6 days later, the cells were trypsinized and stained with trypan blue (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA). The number of cells was counted using the Countess Automated Cell Counter (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA). Sixty cells were seeded in 60-mm dishes to perform the CFU assay. The colonies were stained with crystal violet (Sigma) and counted 10 days after plating.
Induction of differentiation
Transfected hADSCs were seeded in 12-well plates at a density of 3 × 104 cells/cm2. After 24 h incubation, adipogenic differentiation was induced by replacing with the adipogenic medium (10% FBS, 1 μM dexamethasone, 0.5 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, and 200 μM indomethacin in α-MEM) for 7 days and assessed by staining with the Oil Red O dye as an indicator of intracellular lipid accumulation. To induce osteogenic differentiation, cells were seeded in 12-well plates at a density of 4 × 104 cells/cm2 and incubated for 24 h before replacing with the osteogenic medium (10% FBS, 0.1 μM dexamethasone, 10 mM β-glycerophosphate, and 50 μM ascorbic acid in α-MEM). After 21 days, osteogenic differentiation was determined by staining with the Alizarin Red S to visualize calcification deposits.
Cell viability analysis
hADSCs were transfected with miRNA or siRNA. After 48 h incubation, cells were seeded in 12-well plates at a density of 8 × 104 cells/well. On the following day, confluent cells were treated with CoCl2 or SIN-1 for 20 h, trypsinized and stained with trypan blue (Sigma). The number of viable and dead cells was counted using the Countess Automated Cell Counter.
Cell-cycle analysis
hADSCs were harvested and fixed with 70% ethanol. After extensive washing with HBSS, the cells were suspended in HBSS containing RNase A and PI (Sigma). The cells were incubated for 30 min at 37 °C before flow-cytometric analysis using a FACS Canto II instrument (BD, San Jose, CA, USA) and the acquired data were analyzed using the FlowJo software (Tree Star, Ashland, OR, USA).
Annexin V staining assays for apoptosis
For Annexin V staining assays, cells were stained with Annexin V–FITC and PI, and evaluated for apoptosis by flow cytometry according to the manufacturer's protocol (BD). The apoptotic cells were determined using a FACS Canto II instrument (BD).
Assay for intracellular ROS detection
Intracellular ROS production was measured with H2-DCFDA (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, USA) staining as described according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, cells were pre-incubated with H2-DCFDA for 30 min in 5% CO2 environment at 37 °C. After pre-incubation step, the cells were treated with CoCl2 or SIN-1 for 20 h, floating and adherent cells were collected. Changes in fluorescence intensity of each sample were measured by the FACS Canto II instrument and analyzed by flow-cytometric analysis using the FlowJo software.
Real-time PCR
Total cellular RNA was extracted with TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen), followed by a reverse transcription with cDNA synthesis kit (Promega, Madison, WI, USA). Small RNA species-enriched RNA isolation was performed as per manufacturer's instructions (mirVana miRNA isolation kit; Ambion, Austin, TX, USA). miRNA was reverse transcribed using the Ncode miRNA first-strand cDNA synthesis kit (Invitrogen), according to the manufacturer's specified guidelines. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis was performed using SYBR Green PCR Master Mix on ABI 7500 system (Applied Biosystems, Warrington, UK).
Western blot analysis
Samples were homogenized in RIPA buffer (Sigma).The isolated proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and electro-transferred onto PVDF membranes (Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA). Blots were probed with primary antibodies, followed by HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies. Antibodies used in this study were purchased as indicated: Bad, Bak, Bax, Bcl-2, Bcl-XL, Keap1 and p21 from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Dallas, TX, USA); Nrf-2 and p-Nrf-2 from Abcam (Cambridge, MA, USA); HO-1 from Enzo life sciences(Farmingdale, NY, USA); GAPDH from Cell Signaling Technologies (Boston, MA, USA). Bound antibodies were detected using an ECL detection kit (Pierce Biotechnology, Rockford, IL, USA) and visualized using LAS 3000 Luminoimage Analyzer (Fujifilm, Tokyo, Japan).
Microarray analysis
Total RNA was extracted with TRIzol (Invitrogen) and purified using RNeasy columns (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Microarray analysis was carried out by Macrogen Inc. (Seoul, Korea). Briefly, biotinylated complementary RNAs were amplified and purified using the Ambion Illumina RNA amplification kit (Ambion) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Labeled cRNA samples were hybridized to each human HT-12 expression v.4 bead array according to the manufacturer's instructions (Illumina, SanDiego, CA, USA). Detection of array signal was carried out using Amersham fluoroLink streptavidin-Cy3 (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden). Arrays were scanned with an Illumina bead array Reader confocal scanner, and the raw data were extracted using the software provided by the manufacturer (Illumina GenomeStudio v2011.1 (Gene Expression Module v1.9.0)).
Reporter vectors and DNA constructs
A putative miR-302d-recognition element (as single copy) from the CDKN1A or CCL5 gene was cloned in the 3'- UTR of the firefly luciferase reporter vector according to the manufacturer's specified guidelines. The oligonucleotide sequences were designed to carry the HindIII and SpeI sites at their extremities facilitating ligation into the HindIII and SpeI sites of pMIR-Report (Ambion). The oligonucleotides used in these studies were pMIR-CDKN1A FW, 5′-CTAGTTTCTTTTTCATTTGAGAAGTAAACAGATGGCACTTTGAAGGGGCCTCACCGA-3′, RV, 5′-AGCTTCGGTGAGGCCCCTTCAAAGTGCCATCTGTTTACTTCTCAAATGAAAAAGAAA-3′ pMIR-CDKN1A mut FW, 5'-CTAGTTTCTTTTTCATTTGAGAAGTCCCACGATGTACAGGTGAAGGGGCCTCACCGA-3', RV, 5′-AGCTTCGGTGAGGCCCCTTCACCTGTACATCGTGGGACTTCTCAAATGAAAAAGAAA-3′ pMIR-CCL5 FW, 5′-CTAGTGGCTGGACGTGGTGGCTCACGCCTGTAATCCCAGCACTTTGGGAGGCCAAGA-3′ RV, 5′-AGCTTCTTGGCCTCCCAAAGTGCTGGGATTACAGGCGTGAGCCACCACGTCCAGCCA-3′ pMIR-CCL5 mut FW, 5′-CTAGTGGCTGGACGTGGTGTAGACCGACGTTCATCCCCTACAGGTGGGAGGCCAAGA-3′ RV, 5′-AGCTTCTTGGCCTCCCACCTGTAGGGGATGAACGTCGGTCTACACCACGTCCAGCCA-3′.
Reporter gene assay
Luciferase reporter assay was performed using Luciferase Assay System (Promega) according to the manufacturer's specified guidelines. Briefly, DharmaFECT Duo Transfection Reagent (Thermo Scientific, Epsom, UK) was used for cotransfection of reporter plasmid and miRNA mimic. The pMIR-CDKN1A or pMIR-CCL5 and pMIR-β-gal plasmids were used as reporter constructs. The cells were harvested 72 h after transfection, lysed in RLB buffer, and subsequently assayed for their luciferase activity by Victor3 Multilabel Plate Reader (Perkin-Elmer, Waltham, MA, USA). The transfections were performed in duplicate, and all experiments were repeated several times. The luciferase assays were normalized according to their β-galactosidase activity.
ELISA
The cell-culture supernatants from hADSCs were subjected to ELISA. The secretion of CCL5 was measured with commercially available ELISA kits (R&D Systems) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The absorbance (450 nm) for each sample was analyzed using Sunrise Microplate Reader (TECAN SUNRISE, Männedorf, Switzerland).
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as the mean±S.D. of independent experiments with similar results. Statistical comparisons between experimental groups were performed with ANOVA test or two-tailed Student's t-test. P<0.05 was considered as statistically significant.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant founded by the Korea Government (MSIP; 2012M3A9B4028558) and the MRC program of MEST/KOSEF (2007-0052078).
Glossary
- MSCs
mesenchymal stem cells
- hASDCs
human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells
- miRNAs
microRNAs
- UTR
untranslated region
- ORF
open reading frame
- ESCs
embryonic stem cells
- iPSCs
induced pluripotent stem cells
- ESCC
embryonic stem cell-specific cell cycle-regulating
- ROS
reactive oxygen species
- CoCl2
cobalt chloride
- SIN-1
3-morpholinosydnonimine hydrochloride
- SOD
superoxide dismutase
- CAT
catalase
- GPX
glutathione peroxidase
- GST
glutathione S-transferase
- HO-1
haemoxygenase-1
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Footnotes
Supplementary Information accompanies this paper on Cell Death and Disease website (http://www.nature.com/cddis)
Edited by R De Maria
Supplementary Material
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