Sorry, there was a problem loading sequence from server. Please try again and contact us if the problem persists.
Homo sapiens (human) microRNA hsa-mir-210 precursor secondary structure diagram

Homo sapiens (human) microRNA hsa-mir-210 precursor URS00005FDE16_9606

Caution, this is an AI generated summary based on literature. This may have errors, see here for more. Please share your feedback with us.

MIR210: MIR210 is a microRNA that is associated with neuroinflammation and hypoxia in Parkinson's disease (PD) [PMC7215947]. In a study, changes in the relative expression levels of three microRNAs, including MIR210, were assessed in a pre-motor PD model [PMC7215947]. A hydrogel loaded with the secretory body from the human ADSC line HATMSC2 was found to have high levels of MIR210, indicating its potential in chronic wound treatment [PMC9742286]. Overexpression of MIR210 was observed in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and was associated with higher disease stage, poor overall and disease-free survival, and high incidence of recurrence after chemotherapy [PMC8799276]. Transgenic mouse experiments using doxycycline-inducible transgenic mice showed the use of MIR210 (Tg-210) [PMC8088433]. HIF-1α was found to be required for the induction of MIR210 in activated T cells, suggesting that HIF-1 acts upstream of miR-210 [PMC3996831]. In addition to MIR210, miR21 and miR155 were also studied for their cancer and immune-related functions [PMC6862702]. MIR210 is a hypoxia-associated microRNA that has been implicated in neuroinflammation and various diseases such as Parkinson's disease (PD) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) [PMC7215947] [PMC9742286] [PMC8799276] [PMC8088433] [PMC3996831]  [PMC6862702].

Genome locations

Gene Ontology annotations

Sequence

Sequence features are shown above as colored rectangles. Zoom in and click to view details, or Reset

Search for similar sequences
ACCCGGCAGUGCCUCCAGGCGCAGGGCAGCCCCUGCCCACCGCACACUGCGCUGCCCCAGACCCACUGUGCGUGUGACAGCGGCUGAUCUGUGCCUGGGCAGCGCGACCC

Taxonomic tree

View annotations in different species by clicking on species names.

Scroll around to explore the entire tree. Click tree nodes to collapse or expand them. Hover over taxon names to display additional information.

2D structure Publications