Abstract

Exercise and its regulated molecules have myocardial protective effects against cardiac ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. The muscle-enriched miR-486 was previously identified to be upregulated in the exercised heart, which prompted us to investigate the functional roles of miR-486 in cardiac I/R injury and to further explore its potential in contributing to exercise-induced protection against I/R injury. Our data showed that miR-486 was significantly downregulated in the heart upon cardiac I/R injury. Both preventive and therapeutic interventions of adeno-associated virus 9 (AAV9)-mediated miR-486 overexpression could reduce cardiac I/R injury. Using AAV9 expressing miR-486 with a cTnT promoter, we further demonstrated that cardiac muscle cell-targeted miR-486 overexpression was also sufficient to protect against cardiac I/R injury. Consistently, miR-486 was downregulated in oxygen-glucose deprivation/reperfusion (OGDR)-stressed cardiomyocytes, while upregulating miR-486 inhibited cardiomyocyte apoptosis through PTEN and FoxO1 inhibition and AKT/mTOR activation. Finally, we observed that miR-486 was necessary for exercise-induced protection against cardiac I/R injury. In conclusion, miR-486 is protective against cardiac I/R injury and myocardial apoptosis through targeting of PTEN and FoxO1 and activation of the AKT/mTOR pathway, and mediates the beneficial effect of exercise for myocardial protection. Increasing miR-486 might be a promising therapeutic strategy for myocardial protection.

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