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LncRNA XIST Prevents Tendon Adhesion and Promotes Tendon Repair Through the miR-26a-5p/COX2 Pathway

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Abstract

Tendon adhesion is the biggest obstacle to repair of tendon injury. Long-chain non-coding RNA X-inactive specific transcript (lncRNA XIST) is highly expressed in populations at high risk of tendon injury. However, whether XIST participates in tendon injury and the specific mechanism remain unknown. Here, we aimed to explore the effects and underlying mechanism of XIST in tendon injury. A mouse model of tendon injury was constructed by the transection method in vivo. XIST and COX2 were highly expressed in tendon tissues of mice with tendon injury, while miR-26a-5p was lowly expressed. Fibroblasts were isolated from tendon injury mice. Overexpression of XIST promoted fibroblast proliferation and upregulated α-SMA and Collagen I protein expression, while silencing XIST indicated the opposite effects. Further dual-luciferase reporter gene assay and RIP assay verified a targeting relationship between XIST and miR-26a-5p, as well as miR-26a-5p and COX2, and XIST targeted miR-26a-5p to act on COX2 expression. miR-26a-5p inhibition and COX2 overexpression reversed the decrease in fibroblast proliferation and the downregulation of α-SMA and Collagen I expression caused by XIST silencing, while interference with si-COX2 eliminated the effects of miR-26a-5p inhibitor. This study revealed that XIST promoted fibroblast proliferation and the formation of tendon adhesion through miR-26a-5p/COX2 pathway, suggesting that XIST/miR-26a-5p/COX2 may be a potential target for the treatment of tendon injury.


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