miRNA-140-5p: new avenue for pulmonary arterial hypertension drug development?

2016 
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare but fatal disease. Pathologically, PAH is characterised by sustained vasoconstriction and progressive obliteration of small pulmonary arteries through a process of medial thickening, intimal fibrosis and the formation of angioproliferative lesions. Current treatments target the sustained vasoconstriction via either the prostacyclin, endothelin or nitric oxide pathway but do little to address the underlying progressive proliferative vascular disease. Dysregulated expression of microRNA (miR) has been identified in PAH and we have recently highlighted reduced miR-140-5p in patients with PAH. Replacement of miR-140-5p attenuated disease in animal models with the regulation of Smurf1, a E3 ubiquitin ligase targeting BMPR2 as one identified mechanism. These data highlight Smurf1 inhibition as a treatment for PAH.
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