Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Role of long non-coding RNAs expression (ANRIL, NOS3-AS, and APOA1-AS) in development of atherosclerosis in Egyptian systemic lupus erythematosus patients

Clinical Rheumatology, Volume 37, No. 12, Year 2018

To quantify the expression level of three lncRNAs which are known to be relevant to atherosclerosis (ANRIL, NOS3-AS, and APOA1-AS) in SLE patients and to assess their relationship with atherogenic and inflammatory biomarkers. The circulating levels of these lncRNAs were assessed using RT-PCR, in addition to measurement of E-selectin, V-CAM1, oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL), total nitric oxide (NOx), and lipid profile in 65 SLE patients (35 atherosclerotic and 30 non-atherosclerotic) and 35 healthy subjects. The expression levels of these lncRNAs were higher in SLE patients than in healthy controls. Importantly, a higher overexpression of these lncRNAs was noticed in atherosclerotic SLE patients than in non-atherosclerotic ones. In atherosclerotic SLE patients, level of ANRIL was positively associated with menopause, SLE duration, SLEDAI, and SLICC and negatively correlated with C3. Moreover, NOS3-AS expression was negatively correlated with total NOx level and HDL, while it was positively correlated with TC, LDL-C, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, obesity and dyslipidemia, CIMT, VCAM-1, E-selectin, oxLDL, SLEDAI, and SLICC. With respect to APOA1-AS, its expression was negatively correlated with HDL-C, whereas it was positively correlated with TC, LDL-C, hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity, metabolic syndrome, menopause, CIMT, RI, V-CAM1, E-selectin, oxLDL, and SLICC. ANRIL, NOS3-AS, and APOA1-AS could be used as predictive biomarkers for atherosclerosis in SLE. Multivariate analyses identified these lncRNAs as independent predictors for atherosclerosis in SLE. These lncRNAs play a pivotal role in development of atherosclerosis via their significant repercussions atherogenic and inflammatory indices.
Statistics
Citations: 19
Authors: 4
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Research Areas
Noncommunicable Diseases
Sexual And Reproductive Health