Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-015-1256-3
Title: Integromics network meta-analysis on cardiac aging offers robust multi-layer modular signatures and reveals micronome synergism
Authors: Dimitrakopoulou, K
Vrahatis, A.G
Bezerianos, A 
Keywords: cytochrome c oxidase
hyperpolarization activated cyclic nucleotide gated potassium channel 3
microRNA
microRNA 106a
microRNA 106b
microRNA 107
microRNA 125a
microRNA 125b
microRNA 128
microRNA 132
microRNA 148a
microRNA 152
microRNA 15b
microRNA 181b
microRNA 18a
microRNA 190b
microRNA 19a
microRNA 200b
microRNA 200c
microRNA 22
microRNA 34a
microRNA 363
potassium channel
proteome
proton transporting adenosine triphosphate synthase
Ras protein
reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase
ribosome protein
transcriptome
unclassified drug
microRNA
transcriptome
aging
Article
biomics
cardiac aging
cardiovascular parameters
computer program
human
information processing
integromics
lifespan
longevity
mathematical analysis
nonhuman
protein expression
protein interaction
protein targeting
proteomics
reproducibility
sequence homology
animal
cardiovascular disease
gene regulatory network
genetics
heart
meta analysis
mouse
pathology
pathophysiology
Aging
Animals
Cardiovascular Diseases
Gene Regulatory Networks
Heart
Humans
Mice
MicroRNAs
Transcriptome
Issue Date: 2015
Citation: Dimitrakopoulou, K, Vrahatis, A.G, Bezerianos, A (2015). Integromics network meta-analysis on cardiac aging offers robust multi-layer modular signatures and reveals micronome synergism. BMC Genomics 16 (1) : 147. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-015-1256-3
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background: The avalanche of integromics and panomics approaches shifted the deciphering of aging mechanisms from single molecular entities to communities of them. In this orientation, we explore the cardiac aging mechanisms - risk factor for multiple cardiovascular diseases - by capturing the micronome synergism and detecting longevity signatures in the form of communities (modules). For this, we developed a meta-analysis scheme that integrates transcriptome expression data from multiple cardiac-specific independent studies in mouse and human along with proteome and micronome interaction data in the form of multiple independent weighted networks. Modularization of each weighted network produced modules, which in turn were further analyzed so as to define consensus modules across datasets that change substantially during lifespan. Also, we established a metric that determines - from the modular perspective - the synergism of microRNA-microRNA interactions as defined by significantly functionally associated targets. Results: The meta-analysis provided 40 consensus integromics modules across mouse datasets and revealed microRNA relations with substantial collective action during aging. Three modules were reproducible, based on homology, when mapped against human-derived modules. The respective homologs mainly represent NADH dehydrogenases, ATP synthases, cytochrome oxidases, Ras GTPases and ribosomal proteins. Among various observations, we corroborate to the involvement of miR-34a (included in consensus modules) as proposed recently; yet we report that has no synergistic effect. Moving forward, we determined its age-related neighborhood in which HCN3, a known heart pacemaker channel, was included. Also, miR-125a-5p/-351, miR-200c/-429, miR-106b/-17, miR-363/-92b, miR-181b/-181d, miR-19a/-19b, let-7d/-7f, miR-18a/-18b, miR-128/-27b and miR-106a/-291a-3p pairs exhibited significant synergy and their association to aging and/or cardiovascular diseases is supported in many cases by a disease database and previous studies. On the contrary, we suggest that miR-22 has not substantial impact on heart longevity as proposed recently. Conclusions: We revised several proteins and microRNAs recently implicated in cardiac aging and proposed for the first time modules as signatures. The integromics meta-analysis approach can serve as an efficient subvening signature tool for more-oriented better-designed experiments. It can also promote the combinational multi-target microRNA therapy of age-related cardiovascular diseases along the continuum from prevention to detection, diagnosis, treatment and outcome. © 2015 Dimitrakopoulou et al.; licensee BioMed Central.
Source Title: BMC Genomics
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/181413
ISSN: 14712164
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-015-1256-3
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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