Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease characterized as joint synovial inflammation. MicroRNA is a group of small noncoding RNA molecules discovered in recent years that can posttranscriptional regulate mRNA expression and involved in a variety processes of immune cell activation and differentiation. There is still lack of study about the role of miR-451 in rheumatoid arthritis. Synovial fibroblasts isolated from rheumatoid arthritis patients were cultured in vitro. Chemical synthesized miR-451 was lipo-transfected, real-time RT-PCR was applied to detect miR-451 expression level, and MTT method was used to detect the effect of miR-451 on synovial fibroblasts proliferation. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was used to detect tumor necrosis factor TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6 level in the supernatant. Western blot was applied to test target protein p38 MAPK expression level. Our study found that synovial fibroblasts expressed higher miR-451 mRNA level in miR-451 treatment group. MiR-451 treatment significantly decreased cell proliferation ability (P < 0.05). Compared with the control, p38 MAPK protein expression reduced obviously in the miR-451 treatment group (P < 0.05). MiR-451 transfected synovial fibroblasts secreted lower levels of TNF-α (198 ± 12 pg/ml vs 124 ± 13 pg/ml, P < 0.01), IL-1β (352 ± 43 pg/ml vs 165 ± 87 pg/ml, P < 0.01), and IL-6 (487 ± 84 pg/ml vs 257 ± 92 pg/ml, P < 0.01). The results proved that miR-451 can down-regulate p38 MAPK protein expression, and reduce synovial fibroblasts proliferation and cytokine expression level.
Keywords: cell proliferation; miR-451; rheumatoid arthritis; synovial fibroblast.