Detail (Experimental CeRNA)

Home Detail(Experimental CeRNA)

Basic Information

Regular Relationship :


Phenotype/DiseaseSpecie

Cardiac Hypertrophy

CeRNA1

MIAT[LncRNA]

miRNA

miR-150[miRNA]

CeRNA2

b-MHC[mRNA]


Tissue/Cell line

H9C2

Specie

Mus musculus (mouse)

Citation

Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 2016 Sep 20, 3653-60, PMID:27649667


Reference title
LncRNA MIAT enhances cardiac hypertrophy partly through sponging miR-150.
Experimental verification
qRT-PCR

Functional description
MIAT siRNA substantially alleviated the Ang II induced upregulation of ANP, BNP and b-MHC in H9c2 cells and markedly attenuated the Ang II induced increase of the cell surface area and the protein synthesis. MIAT overexpression in H9c2 cells significantly reduced the miR-150 expression.

Annotations

External Annotation for MIAT
LncRNA-associated competing triplets and functions.
Comprehensive experimentally supported associations between lncRNA and human cancer.
Infer genomic variations that disturb lncRNA-associated ceRNA regulation..
Provide and annotate disease or phenotype-associated variants in human long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) and circular RNAs (circRNAs) or their regulatory elements.
Providing cellular-specific lncRNA-associated ceRNA networks predicted via high-throughput analysis of single-cell genomic data.
Information on all annotated and predicted human genes.
Gene nomenclature, gene families and associated resources (genomic, proteomic, phenotypic information).
Genome browser for vertebrate genomes.
An annotated collection of all publicly available DNA sequences.
A wiki-based platform for community curation of human long non-coding RNAs.
An integrated knowledge database dedicated to non-coding RNAs.
An integrated database of human annotated lncRNA transcripts.
Comprehensive annotations of eukaryotic long non-coding RNAs.
Comprehensive experimentally supported associations between lncRNA and human cancer.
A comprehensive, authoritative compendium of human genes and genetic phenotypes.
The catalogue of somatic mutations in cancer.

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