Affiliation:
1. Xianyang Vocational Technical College, XianYang, ShaanXi, 725000, China
2. The First Clinical Medical College of Affiliated Hospital of Shaanxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Xian Yang, ShaanXi, 712000
3. Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, Research Center for Evidence-Based Health Management, Maragheh University of Medical Science, Maragheh, Iran
Abstract
Abstract:
One of the greatest serious side effects of diabetes is diabetic nephropathy
(DN), which is also the key factor in the sometimes-deadly diabetic end-stage renal
disease. Progressive renal interstitial fibrosis is closely associated with oxidative
stress, and the extracellular matrix is typically a feature of DN. Some RNAs formed by
genome transcription that are not translated into proteins are recognized as noncoding
RNAs. It has been shown that ncRNAs control apoptosis, inflammatory
response, cell proliferation, autophagy, and other pathogenic processes, contributing
to the pathogenesis of DN. Exosomes are nano-carriers vesicles that variety in size
from 40 to 160 nm. Exosomes are widely present and dispersed in different bodily
fluids, plentiful in nucleic acids, lipids, and proteins (microRNA, mRNA, tRNA, lncRNA,
circRNA, etc.). Exosomes play a crucial role as messengers for cellular
communication. They transport and transmit key signaling molecules, participate in the
transfer of information and materials between cells, control cellular physiological
processes, and are carefully linked to the beginning and development of many
diseases. Herein, we summarized the role of different ncRNAs in DN. Moreover, we
highlighted the role of the exosomal form of ncRNAs in the DN pathogenesis.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.