Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.

Dietary microRNAs (miRNAs), notably those found in milk, are currently being investigated for their potential to elicit biological effects via canonical binding to human messenger RNA targets once ingested. Besides milk, beef and other bovine tissue-derived ingredients could also be a relevant sourc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joseph T Dever, Michael Q Kemp, Amber L Thompson, Hana G K Keller, James C Waksmonski, Chris D Scholl, David M Barnes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138275
id doaj-437e7a9e1bc8424290669044c40528c4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-437e7a9e1bc8424290669044c40528c42021-03-03T19:59:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01109e013827510.1371/journal.pone.0138275Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.Joseph T DeverMichael Q KempAmber L ThompsonHana G K KellerJames C WaksmonskiChris D SchollDavid M BarnesDietary microRNAs (miRNAs), notably those found in milk, are currently being investigated for their potential to elicit biological effects via canonical binding to human messenger RNA targets once ingested. Besides milk, beef and other bovine tissue-derived ingredients could also be a relevant source of potentially bioactive dietary miRNAs. In this study, we characterized the human homologous miRNA profiles in food-grade, bovine-sourced sirloin, heart and adrenal tissue (raw, cooked, and pasteurized, freeze-dried extracts) via deep-sequencing and quantitative reverse transcription PCR (RT-qPCR). A total of 198 human homologous miRNAs were detected at 10 or more normalized reads in all replicates (n = 3) of at least one preparation method. Tissue origin rather than preparation method was the major differentiating factor of miRNA profiles, and adrenal-based miRNA profiles were the most distinct. The ten most prevalent miRNAs in each tissue represented 71-93% of the total normalized counts for all annotated miRNAs. In cooked sirloin, the most abundant miRNAs were miR-10b-5p, (48.8% of total annotated miRNA reads) along with the muscle-specific miR-1 (24.1%) and miR-206 (4.8%). In dried heart extracts, miR-1 (17.0%), miR-100-5p (16.1%) and miR-99a-5p (11.0%) gave the highest normalized read counts. In dried adrenal extracts, miR-10b-5p (71.2%) was the most prominent followed by miR-143-3p (7.1%) and 146b-5p (3.7%). Sequencing results for five detected and two undetected miRNAs were successfully validated by RT-qPCR. We conclude that edible, bovine tissues contain unique profiles of human homologous dietary miRNAs that survive heat-based preparation methods.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138275
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph T Dever
Michael Q Kemp
Amber L Thompson
Hana G K Keller
James C Waksmonski
Chris D Scholl
David M Barnes
spellingShingle Joseph T Dever
Michael Q Kemp
Amber L Thompson
Hana G K Keller
James C Waksmonski
Chris D Scholl
David M Barnes
Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Joseph T Dever
Michael Q Kemp
Amber L Thompson
Hana G K Keller
James C Waksmonski
Chris D Scholl
David M Barnes
author_sort Joseph T Dever
title Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.
title_short Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.
title_full Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.
title_fullStr Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.
title_full_unstemmed Survival and Diversity of Human Homologous Dietary MicroRNAs in Conventionally Cooked Top Sirloin and Dried Bovine Tissue Extracts.
title_sort survival and diversity of human homologous dietary micrornas in conventionally cooked top sirloin and dried bovine tissue extracts.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Dietary microRNAs (miRNAs), notably those found in milk, are currently being investigated for their potential to elicit biological effects via canonical binding to human messenger RNA targets once ingested. Besides milk, beef and other bovine tissue-derived ingredients could also be a relevant source of potentially bioactive dietary miRNAs. In this study, we characterized the human homologous miRNA profiles in food-grade, bovine-sourced sirloin, heart and adrenal tissue (raw, cooked, and pasteurized, freeze-dried extracts) via deep-sequencing and quantitative reverse transcription PCR (RT-qPCR). A total of 198 human homologous miRNAs were detected at 10 or more normalized reads in all replicates (n = 3) of at least one preparation method. Tissue origin rather than preparation method was the major differentiating factor of miRNA profiles, and adrenal-based miRNA profiles were the most distinct. The ten most prevalent miRNAs in each tissue represented 71-93% of the total normalized counts for all annotated miRNAs. In cooked sirloin, the most abundant miRNAs were miR-10b-5p, (48.8% of total annotated miRNA reads) along with the muscle-specific miR-1 (24.1%) and miR-206 (4.8%). In dried heart extracts, miR-1 (17.0%), miR-100-5p (16.1%) and miR-99a-5p (11.0%) gave the highest normalized read counts. In dried adrenal extracts, miR-10b-5p (71.2%) was the most prominent followed by miR-143-3p (7.1%) and 146b-5p (3.7%). Sequencing results for five detected and two undetected miRNAs were successfully validated by RT-qPCR. We conclude that edible, bovine tissues contain unique profiles of human homologous dietary miRNAs that survive heat-based preparation methods.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138275
work_keys_str_mv AT josephtdever survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
AT michaelqkemp survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
AT amberlthompson survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
AT hanagkkeller survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
AT jamescwaksmonski survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
AT chrisdscholl survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
AT davidmbarnes survivalanddiversityofhumanhomologousdietarymicrornasinconventionallycookedtopsirloinanddriedbovinetissueextracts
_version_ 1714824681905717248