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      Research trends and hotspots of circular RNA in cardiovascular disease: A bibliometric analysis

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          Abstract

          From a global perspective, cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), the leading factor accounting for population mortality, and circRNAs, RNA molecules with stable closed-loop structures, have been proven to be closely related. The latent clinical value and the potential role of circRNAs in CVDs have been attracting increasing, active research interest, but bibliometric studies in this field are still lacking. Thus, in this study, we conducted a bibliometric analysis by using software such as VOSviewer, CiteSpace, Microsoft Excel, and the R package to determine the current research progress and hotspots and ultimately provide an overview of the development trends and future frontiers in this field. In our study, based on our search strategy, a total of 1206 publications published before July 31, 2023 were accessed from the WOSCC database. According to our findings, there is a notable increasing trend in global publications in the field of circRNA in CVDs. China was found to be the dominant country in terms of publication number, but a lack of high-quality articles was a significant fault. A cluster analysis on the co-cited references indicated that dilated cardiomyopathy, AMI, and cardiac hypertrophy are the greatest objects of concern. In contrast, a keywords analysis indicated that high importance has been ascribed to MI, abdominal aortic aneurysm, cell proliferation, and coronary artery diseases.

          Highlights

          • CircRNAs in CVDs have been an active research interest.

          • CircRNAs in dilated cardiomyopathy, AMI, and cardiac hypertrophy are with greatest concern.

          • The role of circRNAs in CVDs and its molecular mechanism are the current research orientation.

          • The potential of circRNAs as therapeutic targets or remedies for CVDs is the research hot spot.

          • CircRNAs translating polypeptides hasn't yet been widely studied in CVD, holding great value to be further discussed.

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          Most cited references101

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          Circular RNAs are a large class of animal RNAs with regulatory potency.

          Circular RNAs (circRNAs) in animals are an enigmatic class of RNA with unknown function. To explore circRNAs systematically, we sequenced and computationally analysed human, mouse and nematode RNA. We detected thousands of well-expressed, stable circRNAs, often showing tissue/developmental-stage-specific expression. Sequence analysis indicated important regulatory functions for circRNAs. We found that a human circRNA, antisense to the cerebellar degeneration-related protein 1 transcript (CDR1as), is densely bound by microRNA (miRNA) effector complexes and harbours 63 conserved binding sites for the ancient miRNA miR-7. Further analyses indicated that CDR1as functions to bind miR-7 in neuronal tissues. Human CDR1as expression in zebrafish impaired midbrain development, similar to knocking down miR-7, suggesting that CDR1as is a miRNA antagonist with a miRNA-binding capacity ten times higher than any other known transcript. Together, our data provide evidence that circRNAs form a large class of post-transcriptional regulators. Numerous circRNAs form by head-to-tail splicing of exons, suggesting previously unrecognized regulatory potential of coding sequences.
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            A ceRNA hypothesis: the Rosetta Stone of a hidden RNA language?

            Here, we present a unifying hypothesis about how messenger RNAs, transcribed pseudogenes, and long noncoding RNAs "talk" to each other using microRNA response elements (MREs) as letters of a new language. We propose that this "competing endogenous RNA" (ceRNA) activity forms a large-scale regulatory network across the transcriptome, greatly expanding the functional genetic information in the human genome and playing important roles in pathological conditions, such as cancer. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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              The biogenesis, biology and characterization of circular RNAs

              Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are covalently closed, endogenous biomolecules in eukaryotes with tissue-specific and cell-specific expression patterns, whose biogenesis is regulated by specific cis-acting elements and trans-acting factors. Some circRNAs are abundant and evolutionarily conserved, and many circRNAs exert important biological functions by acting as microRNA or protein inhibitors ('sponges'), by regulating protein function or by being translated themselves. Furthermore, circRNAs have been implicated in diseases such as diabetes mellitus, neurological disorders, cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Although the circular nature of these transcripts makes their detection, quantification and functional characterization challenging, recent advances in high-throughput RNA sequencing and circRNA-specific computational tools have driven the development of state-of-the-art approaches for their identification, and novel approaches to functional characterization are emerging.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Noncoding RNA Res
                Noncoding RNA Res
                Non-coding RNA Research
                KeAi Publishing
                2468-0540
                16 April 2024
                September 2024
                16 April 2024
                : 9
                : 3
                : 930-944
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Anatomy, College of Chinese Integrative Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, 201203, China
                [b ]School of Rehabilitation Science, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, 201203, China
                [c ]TCM Regulating Metabolic Diseases Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Hospital of Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chengdu, 610072, China
                [d ]Guanghua School of Stomatology, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, 510080, China
                [e ]Department of Pathology, Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital, School of Medicine, Tongji University, Shanghai, 200433, China
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. bnliu15@ 123456fudan.edu.cn
                [** ]Corresponding author. hdguo8@ 123456hotmail.com
                [*** ]Corresponding author. lishaoling@ 123456tongji.edu.cn
                [1]

                Equal contributors.

                Article
                S2468-0540(24)00084-2
                10.1016/j.ncrna.2024.04.002
                11047193
                38680417
                7948262e-f20b-4e73-8724-19f1e4ed4cb9
                © 2024 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 1 December 2023
                : 3 April 2024
                : 16 April 2024
                Categories
                Original Research Article

                circular rnas,cardiovascular diseases,biomarker,therapeutic target

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