| Literature DB >> 20940405 |
Michael Dews1, Jamie L Fox, Stacy Hultine, Prema Sundaram, Wenge Wang, Yingqiu Y Liu, Emma Furth, Gregory H Enders, Wafik El-Deiry, Janell M Schelter, Michele A Cleary, Andrei Thomas-Tikhonenko.
Abstract
c-Myc stimulates angiogenesis in tumors through mechanisms that remain incompletely understood. Recent work indicates that c-Myc upregulates the miR-17∼92 microRNA cluster and downregulates the angiogenesis inhibitor thrombospondin-1, along with other members of the thrombospondin type 1 repeat superfamily. Here, we show that downregulation of the thrombospondin type 1 repeat protein clusterin in cells overexpressing c-Myc and miR-17∼92 promotes angiogenesis and tumor growth. However, clusterin downregulation by miR-17∼92 is indirect. It occurs as a result of reduced transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) signaling caused by targeting of several regulatory components in this signaling pathway. Specifically, miR-17-5p and miR-20 reduce the expression of the type II TGFβ receptor and miR-18 limits the expression of Smad4. Supporting these results, in human cancer cell lines, levels of the miR-17∼92 primary transcript MIR17HG negatively correlate with those of many TGFβ-induced genes that are not direct targets of miR-17∼92 (e.g., clusterin and angiopoietin-like 4). Furthermore, enforced expression of miR-17∼92 in MIR17HG(low) cell lines (e.g., glioblastoma) results in impaired gene activation by TGFβ. Together, our results define a pathway in which c-Myc activation of miR-17∼92 attenuates the TGFβ signaling pathway to shut down clusterin expression, thereby stimulating angiogenesis and tumor cell growth.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20940405 PMCID: PMC3007123 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-2412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701