Abstract

Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT) is a common autoimmune thyroid disorder that frequently evolves from asymptomatic, T-cell mediated chronic inflammation toward overt hypothyroidism. Previously, we have demonstrated a role for T-bet, a T helper 1/CD8+ T cell transcription factor (TF), and FoxP3, a regulatory T cell TF, in disease progression and severity, but the basis behind their altered mRNA expression remains unknown. In this study, we aimed to leverage the role for microRNAs, representing negative transcriptional regulators, across the spectrum of HT clinical presentations using the same, well-characterized RNA sample cohort. Ten hypothyroid, untreated patients (hypoHT), 10 hypothyroid cases rendered euthyroid by l-thyroxine therapy (substHT), 11 spontaneously euthyroid HT subjects (euHT), and 10 healthy controls (ctrl) were probed for three candidate immunoregulatory miRNA (miR-9-5p, miR-29a-3p, and miR-210-3p) using quantitative real-time PCR measurements. Data were normalized to U6snRNA and fold difference in expression calculated by the efficiency corrected 2-ΔΔCt model. Compared to healthy controls, peripheral blood (PB) T cells of HT patients exhibited significantly diminished miR-29a-3p expression levels [median expression levels (IQR), HT vs CTRL, 0.62 (0.44-1.01) vs 1.373 (0.63-2.7), P = 0.046], and a similar, but not significant decline in miR-210-3p abundance [HT vs CTRL, 0.64 (0.39-1.31) vs 1.2 (0.5-2.56), P = 0.24, Wilcoxon test]. A significant inverse correlation was observed between the two differentially expressed transcripts, T-bet mRNA and miR-29a-3p. Moreover, altered miR-29a-3p/T-bet expression in T cells of untreated HT patients was related to low serum FT4, high serum thyrotropin, and decreased thyroid volumes. Of note, miR-210-3p expression was positively correlated to HIF1α, and inversely to FoxP3 mRNA levels, but no evidence of differential expression for any of these miRNA-mRNA pairs was observed. Finally, miR-9-5p expression levels were no different in HT vs control comparisons, or related to clinicopathological features. T cell miR-29a-3p is downregulated in HT patients and associated with clinical and biochemical parameters of progressive thyroid injury, plausibly subsequent to altered control of T-bet expression in PB T cells. As such miR-29a-3p/T-bet axis should be further explored as a biomarker or as a plausible target for therapeutic interventions in HT.

Highlights

  • Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) is a multifactorial, autoimmune disorder characterized by the presence of thyroid-specific autoantibodies, chronic lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid gland, and, eventually, hypothyroidism [1]

  • We built upon our previous work by screening for selected miRNAs in an established and well-characterized cohort of HT cases and healthy controls who had been previously typed for T-bet, FoxP3, BLIMP1, and HIF1α expression in bulk peripheral blood (PB) T cells

  • We looked for evidence of correlated changes in miRNA-target mRNA profile by measuring transcript levels of miR-9-5p, miR-29a-3p, and miR-210-3p in an identical RNA sample set

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Summary

Introduction

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT) is a multifactorial, autoimmune disorder characterized by the presence of thyroid-specific autoantibodies, chronic lymphocytic infiltration of the thyroid gland, and, eventually, hypothyroidism [1]. T-bet [2, 3], RORγt [4,5,6], and FOXP3 [3, 7, 8] have all been implicated in the ontogeny and severity of HT in humans; the mechanisms beyond the reported deregulated expression of these TFs in patients’ T cells remain unclear. MiR210, the hypoxia-induced miR, is greatly enhanced in activated, effector CD8+ and CD4+ T cells under Treg- > Th17-polarizing conditions [13], whereby it inhibits FOXP3 expression and impairs the immunosuppressive functions of CD4+ Treg cells. Despite evidence supporting the importance of these miRs in controlling disease-associated TFs, their respective regulatory networks in the context of HT, disease severity, and clinical presentation remain mostly unexplored

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