University of Leicester
Browse

Circulating extracellular vesicle-derived miR-1299 disrupts hepatic glucose homeostasis by targeting the STAT3/FAM3A axis in gestational diabetes mellitus

Download (6.81 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-06, 10:12 authored by Xuyang Chen, Xinyi Tao, Min Wang, Richard D Cannon, Bingnan Chen, Xinyang Yu, Hongbo Qi, Richard Saffery, Philip N Baker, Xiaobo Zhou, Ting-Li Han, Hua Zhang

Background

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are membrane-enclosed structures containing lipids, proteins, and RNAs that play a crucial role in cell-to-cell communication. However, the precise mechanism through which circulating EVs disrupt hepatic glucose homeostasis in gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) remains unclear.

Results

Circulating EVs isolated from human plasma were co-cultured with mammalian liver cells to investigate the potential induction of hepatic insulin resistance by GDM-EVs using glucose output assays, Seahorse assays, metabolomics, fluxomics, qRT-PCR, bioinformatics analyses, and luciferase assays. Our findings demonstrated that hepatocytes exposed to GDM-EVs exhibited increased gluconeogenesis, attenuated energy metabolism, and upregulated oxidative stress. Particularly noteworthy was the discovery of miR-1299 as the predominant miRNA in GDM-EVs, which directly targeting the 3'-untranslated regions (UTR) of STAT3. Our experiments involving loss- and gain-of-function revealed that miR-1299 inhibits the insulin signaling pathway by regulating the STAT3/FAM3A axis, resulting in increased insulin resistance through the modulation of mitochondrial function and oxidative stress in hepatocytes. Moreover, experiments conducted in vivo on mice inoculated with GDM-EVs confirmed the development of glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, and downregulation of STAT3 and FAM3A.

Conclusions

These results provide insights into the role of miR-1299 derived from circulating GDM-EVs in the progression of insulin resistance in hepatic cells via the STAT3/FAM3A axis and downstream metabolic reprogramming.

History

Author affiliation

President & Vice-Chancellor's Office VC: President & VC's Office

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Nanobiotechnology

Volume

22

Issue

1

Pagination

509

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

1477-3155

eissn

1477-3155

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-09-06

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Philip Baker

Deposit date

2024-09-01