Survey of 800+ datasets from human tissue and body fluid reveals XenomiRs are likely artifacts

  1. Marc Riemer Friedländer1,8
  1. 1 Science for Life Laboratory, Stockholm University;
  2. 2 University of Copenhagen, Novo Nordisk, Technical University of Denmark;
  3. 3 Rigshospitalet;
  4. 4 Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG), Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF);
  5. 5 Glostrup Research Institute, Rigshospitalet;
  6. 6 University of Copenhagen;
  7. 7 University of Copenhagen, Herlev Hospital
  1. * Corresponding author; email: marc.friedlander{at}scilifelab.se

Abstract

miRNAs are small 22 nucleotide RNAs that can post-transcriptionally regulate gene expression. It has been proposed that dietary plant miRNAs can enter the human bloodstream and regulate host transcripts, however these findings have been widely disputed. We here conduct the first comprehensive meta-study in the field, surveying the presence and abundances of cross-species miRNAs (xenomiRs) in 824 sequencing datasets from various human tissues and body fluids. We find that xenomiRs are commonly present in tissues (17%) and body fluids (69%), however the abundances are low, comprising 0.001% of host human miRNA counts. Further, we do not detect a significant enrichment of xenomiRs in sequencing data originating from tissues and body fluids that are exposed to dietary intake (such as liver). Likewise, there is no significant depletion of xenomiRs in tissues and body fluids that are relatively separated from the main bloodstream (such as brain and cerebro-spinal fluids). Interestingly, the majority (81%) of body fluid xenomiRs stem from rodents, which are rare human dietary contributions, but common laboratory animals. Body fluid samples from the same studies tend to group together when clustered by xenomiR compositions, suggesting technical batch effects. Last, we performed carefully designed and controlled animal feeding studies, in which we detected no transfer of plant miRNAs into rat blood, or bovine milk sequences into piglet blood. In summary, our comprehensive computational and experimental results indicate that xenomiRs originate from technical artifacts rather than dietary intake.

Keywords

  • Received October 25, 2016.
  • Accepted December 19, 2016.

This article, published in RNA, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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