Abstract

miRNAs are 22 nucleotides long and belong to a class of noncoding RNAs that plays an important role in regulating gene expression at a post-transcriptional level. Studies show aberrant levels of miRNAs to be associated with profibrotic processes in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). However, most of these studies used whole IPF tissue or invitro monocultures in which fibrosis was artificially induced. The current study used laser microdissection to collect fibroblastic foci (FF), the key pathologic lesion in IPF, isolated miRNAs, and compared their expression levels with those found in whole IPF lung tissue and/or invitro cultured fibroblast from IPF or normal lungs. Sequencing libraries were generated, and data generated were bioinformatically analyzed. A total of 18 miRNAs were significantly overexpressed in FF tissue when compared with whole IPF tissue. Of those, 15 were unique to FF. Comparison of FF with cultured IPF fibroblasts also revealed differences in miRNA composition that impacted several signaling pathways. The miRNA composition of FF is both overlapping and distinct from that of whole IPF tissue or cultured IPF fibroblasts and highlights the importance of characterizing FF biology as a phenotypically and functionally discrete tissue microenvironment.

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