Literature DB >> 21286309

Therapeutics Based on microRNA: A New Approach for Liver Cancer.

G Zhang1, Q Wang, R Xu.   

Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a serious public health hazard. Polygenes involvement, accumulation of genetic and epigenetic changes and immune response of viral vector during gene therapy have resulted in the high mortality rate without marked change. To provide a safeguard for gene therapy and the feasibility for a clinical application, efforts have been focused predominantly upon constructing liver-targeted vector recently. MicroRNAs (miRNAs), a class of short endogenous RNAs, regulate the gene expression at the post-transcriptional level through imperfect base pairing with the 3'-untranslated region of target mRNAs. miRNAs, especially the liver-specific miRNA: miR-122, have multiple functions in liver development and abnormal expression of miRNAs could lead to liver diseases. Altered miRNA expressions have been observed in HCCs, viral hepatitis and hepatic fibrosis. The different expression profiles of miRNAs in HCC suggest that miRNAs may serve as either novel potential targets acting directly as oncogenes or therapeutic molecules working as tumor suppressor genes. Moreover, the abundance in general and liver specificity in particular, all together make them attractive to be considered as elements for hepatic specific targeting viral vector. This review describes recent progress in miRNA investigation on liver associated for better understanding the relationship between miRNA and liver cancer in order to raise prospects for therapy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hepatocellular carcinoma; gene therapy; hepatic targeting vector.; hepatic fibrosis; hepatitis; microRNA; tumor suppressor genes

Year:  2010        PMID: 21286309      PMCID: PMC2944997          DOI: 10.2174/138920210791616671

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Genomics        ISSN: 1389-2029            Impact factor:   2.236


INTRODUCTION

Hepatitis, hepatic fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are the main liver diseases, threatening the health of human beings. Especially, HCC is one of the most common cancers worldwide and among the leading causes of cancer-related death [1] arises in the setting of chronic liver diseases, mostly related to viral hepatitis B and C [2-4] and cirrhosis [5]. As other malignant diseases, polygenes involvement coupled with accumulation of genetic and epigenetic changes [6-8] contribute to high mortality rate without marked changes, although unflagging effort has been devoted to study the molecular pathogenesis of HCC. Many factors including exposure to hepatitis viruses [9-11], foodstuffs contaminated with aflatoxin B1(AFB1) [12], heavy alcohol intake [13], nonalcoholic fatty liver disease [14], oral contraceptives [15] and hemochromatosis [16] can lead to HCC. However, the exact pathophysiology of HCC is poorly understood. Underlying liver dysfunction a predisposing condition for HCC is the only thing we can confirm [5]. As a matter of fact, the predisposing condition for HCC dramatically changes the cellar signaling pathways, many genetic and epigenetic aberrations and the corresponding alterations in molecular pathways have been observed in the process of HCC. The involved pathways are depicted as follows: (a) activation of the Wnt/Frizzled/β-catenin pathway through mutations in β-catenin as well as up-regulation of upstream elements, such as Frizzled receptors [17-21], (b) alteration of the MAPK signaling pathway through HBV or HCV infection [22,23], (c) activation of the JAK/STAT pathway through inactivation of JAK-binding proteins [24-26], (d) inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene p53 through gene mutation and posttranscriptional interaction with viral proteins as well as oxidative stress [27-29], (e) alteration of the tumor suppressor retinoblastoma (pRb Pathway) and p16INK4 genes through mutations or promoter methylation [19-21], and (f) alteration of the transforming growth factor-β pathway [19-20]. So far, many HCC-related oncogenes, including AFP, RAS, c-FOS, c-JUN, RHO, TGF-a, HGF, CerbB2, HER-2, HER-2/neu, NEU, NGL, MDM2, MMP, and IGF-⫽ , have been found. The abnormal expression of these genes with regard to a lasting cell proliferation results in carcinogenesis ultimately [30]. There is a long way to go in fighting against HCC. Among all the therapies available for HCC, the surgical resection and liver transplantation are currently best curative options to treat liver cancer. The high frequency of tumor recurrence and metastasis after curative resection is the major obstacle in the process of HCC treatment. Statistics show that the survival rate of patients who have had a resection is 30% to 40% at 5 years, postoperatively [10]. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy, the two conventional therapies applied in the treatment of cancer, also get an unfavorable score because of the resistance of HCC. Moreover, occurrence of HCC often coupled with liver dysfunction, leads to restrict the use of conventional chemotherapeutics as there is more or less non-selective toxicity with significant systemic side effects [31]. Viral vectors, for example, recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV), mediated gene therapy which is targeting liver by hydrostatic pressure injection, is considered to be the appealing approach for liver disease as it is quite effective, associated with higher infectious rate and prolonged expression. However, immune response induced by viral vector coupled with the expression of heterologous gene in unwanted tissues or cells could shut down the function gene expression [30]. Other experimental treatment approaches, including hormonal therapy, biologic and biochemical therapy [32-36], and molecularly targeted therapy [37-40], are still needed to be further vertified in clinical application. There is an urgent need to develop novel treatments for recurrent and advanced HCC. A major endeavor to develop novel treatments should comprise the use of molecular profiling to characterize tumors and provide accurate predictions as well as potential therapeutic targets during the process of HCC. miRNAs, an abundant class of endogenous, small, noncoding RNAs, 19~25 nucleotides, can regulate the expression of protein-coding genes at the posttranscriptional level through imperfect base pairing with the 3′-untranslated region (3′-UTR) of target mRNAs. After the discovery of the first miRNA in the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans by Victor Ambros [41], these short regulatory RNAs have been verified to be an abundant class of RNAs in plants, primates, rodents, birds, fishes, worms and flies ( http://microrna. sanger. ac.uk/). Large DNA viruses have also been found to carry miRNA genes: 5 in Epstein–Barr virus, 12 in Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, 9 in mouse g-herpes-virus 68, and 9 in human cytomegalovirus [42]. miRNAs are post-transcriptional regulators of genes involved in the developmental timing, signaling pathways, apoptosis, metabolism, carcinogenesis and brain development [43]. Accumulating evidences have addressed that miRNAs are also involved in oncogene and tumor suppressor pathways [44-47]. Aberrant expression and structural alterations of miRNA genes have been found in a variety of tumor types [48-56]. miRNAs in liver, the regulators of genes, wear different expression profiles from nondiseased livers to that among the patients with HCC including those with cirrhosis and hepatitis infection [57-59]. The different expression of miRNAs between the normal liver and diseased liver might lead to a novel direction, which is helpful not only for diagnosis, but also for novel therapeutic targets in liver cancer therapy.

miRNA IN LIVER CANCER BIOLOGY

As extensively reviewed, the regulation of microRNA biogenesis (Fig. ) contributes to fine-tuning of the cellular phenotype, including proliferation, cell signaling, and apoptosis; Undoubtedly, miRNAs involve in liver cancer biology.

miRNA Expression Profiles in HCC

Increasing evidence indicated that aberrant expression of miRNAs plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of cancer, either by controlling the expression of known protein-coding genes, or by interacting with oncogenes or tumor suppressors [49]. Therefore, the expression profiles of miRNAs should play important roles in identifying their exact function in liver cancer biology, which may provide valuable information for diagnosis, classification, progression, and even strategy for therapy [60]. A study based on the miRNA expression profiles in 25 pairs of HCC and adjacent non-tumorous tissue (NT) using a human miRNA microarray suggests that miRNA may potentially serve as a diagnostic tool of HCC. By comparing miRNA expression among HCC tissues versus the corresponding non-cancerous liver tissues, 30 miRNAs (Table ) had statistical differences with 3 miRNAs (Table ) significant up-regulation and 5 miRNAs significant down-regulation in HCC, respectively [57]. The accuracy of prediction in the samples as HCC or NT reached 97.8% (45/46) by using support vector machine algorithms based on these data provided above. Another study on the miRNA expression in 10 pairs of HCC and adjacent NT from 10 non-viral hepatitis patients, using a mammalian miRNA microarray containing whole human mature and precursor miRNA sequences disclosed that 15 miRNAs exhibited higher expression and one miRNA demonstrated lower expression in the HCC samples than in the NT samples, respectively [61]. Besides, it is very amazing to find that among a total of 18 miRNAs identified valid expression only in HCC samples, with 6 only in NT samples [61]. Jiang also showed that 16 miRNAs including miR-199a, miR-21, miR-223, and miR-150 were differentially expressed in the tumor compared with adjacent benign liver with 7 miRNAs up-regulation and 5 miRNAs significant down-regulation (Table ) [58]. The potential use of miRNA profiling in subtyping human cancers to provide more accurate prognosis and prediction of response to therapy are illustrated in the article by Ji, they found that the expression of miR-26a and miR-26b in nontumor liver tissue which is higher in women than in men, was reduced in a subgroup of samples from patients with liver cancer during their study. Furthermore, patients with reduced miR-26 expression had significantly reduced survival during a 6-year period but were more likely to have a response to adjuvant therapy with interferon alfa [62]. However, the expression pattern of certain miRNAs has not presented the same among these reports. Maybe it is due to the differences in samples, testing methods and even the non-identical analytical methods. Nevertheless, the expression of hsa-miR-195 is down-regulation in some studies [57], while up-regulation in others [61]. In addition, the expression profiles of certain miRNAs can also characterize the metastasis of HCC [67-68]. By examining the miRNA expression profiles of 482 cancerous and noncancerous specimens from radical resection of 241 patients with HCC, Budhu built a unique 20-miRNA metastasis signature that could significantly predict primary HCC tissues with venous metastases from metastasis-free solitary tumors with 10-fold cross-validation [68]. Zhang found that up-regulated miR-143 also enhances hepatocarcinoma metastasis by repressing fibronectin expression [67]. Moreover, recent studies have documented that miRNAs may serve as either novel potential targets acting directly as oncogenes [69] or therapeutic molecules working as tumor suppressor genes [70]. Therefore, methods for liver cancer classification and therapy based on miRNAs′ unique sensitivity and specificity would prove to be very high-efficiency, succinct and rapid.

Liver Associated miRNAs and p53 Tumor Suppressor Network

The aberrant expression of miRNAs in liver cancer may be attributing to the modulation of cancer-associated transcription factors. Nowadays, there is a clearer picture emerging from the miRNA processing [71-73]. What develops our interest is the relationship between miRNA processing and p53 tumor suppressor networks [74-77]. The p53 protein is a transcription factor that regulates multiple cellular processes in tumor development, either by regulating mRNA directly or by regulating miRNA indirectly. Therefore, the relationship between p53 and miRNA processing is of prime importance in the understanding of tumorigenesis. By now, accumulating studies have addressed that miRNAs are the components of tumor suppressor pathways. An interesting case is represented by miR-34 family. miR-34 family are direct transcriptional targets of p53, whose induction by DNA damage and oncogenic stress depends on p53 both in vitro and in vivo [78,79]. Study carried out by Song further indicated that miR-192 may be another miRNA candidate that is involved in the p53 tumor suppressor network with significant effect on cell cycle control and cell proliferation [75]. To identify the regulation mechanisms in p53-associated miRNA processing, Suzuki showed that p53 facilitates the processing of primary miRNAs to precursor miRNAs by interacting with the Drosha processing complex through the association with DEAD-box RNA helicase p68 [71]. In turn, miRNA can also directly regulate p53. Le firstly demonstrated that miR-125b as a negative regulator of p53 represses p53 protein levels in a manner dependent on its binding site in the p53 3′ UTRs [76]. The conclusion reached by the a fact that overexpression of miR-125b represses the endogenous level of p53 protein and suppresses apoptosis in human neuroblastoma cells, while knockdown of miR-125b elevates the level of p53 protein and induces apoptosis in human lung fibroblastsin. Fornari further showed that miR-122 can also directly regulate p53 by influencing p53 protein stability and transcriptional activity [80]. As the details of these and other miRNA biogenesis and regulatory processes unravel, the coming years promise to be an exciting time in miRNA-based liver cancer research.

miRNAs AND VIRAL HEPATITIS

Viral hepatitis, the major preventable cause of HCC, is a significant medical and public health concern not only in China, but also throughout the world. It causes significant morbidity and mortality [81]. Viral hepatitis is caused by infection with at least five distinct viruses, of which the three most commonly identified in the United States are hepatitis A virus (HAV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and hepatitis C virus (HCV) [82]. Viral hepatitis can be very serious. By now, nearly 2 billion people ever infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) worldwide [83], and 350 million suffering from chronic HBV infection accounting for 320 000 deaths per year [84]. As for viral hepatitis C, an estimated 3% of the world’s population—more than 170 million people — are infected by HCV, resulting in 10,000 to 20,000 deaths a year in the United States [85]. Currently, therapeutics available for viral hepatitis, including Interferon alpha (IFN-α), Peginterferon-alpha-2a (PEG IFN-α) and Ribavirin still could not control the disease completely, Furthermore, both interferon or ribavirin are expensive and often cause severe side effects, limiting their broader use and underscoring a novel therapeutics to improve treatment outcomes. Development of novel therapeutics should be based on the clear understanding of the exact mechanism in transcriptional activity and replication activity of hepatitis virus, especially HBV and HCV. As hoped for, such studies have drawn much attention recently. A growing body of evidence has documented that epigenetic changes may be relevant to occult HBV infection [60, 86]. Further study suggests that methylation at HBV cccDNA island 2 might be correlated with the impaired replication activity of HBV cccDNA, which provides further evidence that methylation of hepatitis B virus covalently closed circular DNA may modulates HBV replication [87]. In addition, there is a clear evidence to confirm that miRNAs also participate in the regulation activity of HBV. Data based on computational approaches showed that one viral mRNA was found to be targeted by the viral miRNA indicating that HBV may use viral miRNAs to regulate its own gene expression [88]. Uprichard further demonstrated that HBV replication and gene expression can be strongly inhibited by virus specific siRNA treatment [89], setting light on the use of RNAi in HBV gene therapy. However, the high sequence specificity of siRNAs, combined with prolonged treatment, promoted the emergence of siRNA-resistant virus variants. An improved study by using artificial miRNA (amiRNA) expression vector based on the murine miR-155 sequence shows that amiRNA could effciently suppress the expression and replication of HBV in vitro without the emergence of siRNA-resistant virus variants [90]. Another case in point is that by using Pol II promoter cassettes that transcribe anti-HBV primary miRNA (pri-miR-122) and pri-miR-31 shuttles, HBV replication is inhibited efficiently both in vitro and in vivo [91]. HCV is an enveloped, positive-strand RNA virus of the Hepacivirus genus with a genome of about 9.6 Kb encoding a polyprotein of approximately 3,000 amino acids [92]. HCV exhibits considerable genetic diversity, but the HCV 5′non-coding region (NCR) plays an important role in viral replication and translation activity is highly conserved. A recent study aimed at integrating RNA structure and functional analysis of the 5′NCR of HCV suggested that the 5′NCR domain I plays an important role in RNA translational efficiency [93]. Liu’s study addressed that cyclophilin A (CyPA), a cellular chaperone with peptidylprolyl-cis-trans-isomerase activity facilitates the replication of HCV RNA by forming specialized membrane structures through a recruiting mechanism [94]. Furthermore, progress in HCV investigation on siRNA and miRNA associated indicated, that RNA interference (RNAi) may be a promising therapeutic entity for viral infections. Since, the HCV genome is a single-stranded RNA that functions as both a template for transcription and template for a negative strand replication intermediate, it is a prime candidate for RNAi. Especially, the internal ribosome entry site (IRES) locating at the 5′noncoding region of the viral genome, the highly conserved sequence and important roles in translation make it as an ideal target for RNAi, which has been documented in many studies [95-98]. As a potential therapeutic entity for viral infections, miRNA will never be inferior to siRNA, if not better. So far, there is still no evidence to confirm that HCV could utilize self-coding miRNAs to regulate its own gene expression, but miRNAs from the host cells may play an essential role in the regulation activity of HCV. A charming case in point is represented by miR-122, a liver-specific miRNA. miR-122 has been addressed to facilitate the replication of HCV by targeting the viral 5′non-coding region [99]. The conclusion reached by the fact that HCV RNA can replicate in Huh 7 cells, which express miR-122, but not in HepG2 cells, which do not express miR-122 [99]. Further study [100] carried out by the same team reveals an important fact that the location of the miR-122 binding site in the Hepatitis C Virus RNA Genome indicates its effect on gene regulation as insertion of the HCV miR-122 binding sites into the 3′NCR of a reporter mRNA leads to downregulation of mRNA expression [100], while miR-122 interacts with the 5′end of the hepatitis C virus RNA genome, resulting in increased viral RNA [99]. In addition, miR-122 can indirectly facilitate HCV replication by down-regulation of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) expression [101], HO-1 can suppress Hepatitis C Virus replication [102]. Therefore, down-regulation of miR-122 and up-regulation of HO-1 may be new strategies for anti-HCV intervention and cytoprotection. At the same time, translation of HCV RNA is also certainly correlated with miR-122. Sequestration of miR-122 in liver cell lines strongly reduces HCV translation, whereas addition of miR-122 stimulates HCV translation in liver cell lines and the non-liver HeLa cells [103]. Among other miRNAs, miR-199a*, another liver-specific miRNA with a sequence similar to the HCV genome has been identified as a potential inhibitor of HCV replication [104]. Different from miR-122, overexpression of miR-199a* inhibited HCV genome replication, inhibition of miR-199a*; however, accelerated viral replication.

miRNAs AND HEPATIC FIBROSIS

Liver fibrosis characterized by an activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) is another cause accounting for HCC. HSCs are the principal liver cells that promote hepatic fibrosis [105]. Normally, residing in the space of Disse, HSCs can be activated by inflammation associated with inflammatory cytokines—including tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), IL-6, CC-chemokine ligand 2/monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1, interleukin (IL)-1, and TGF-α [106]. While some of inflammatory cytokines exert its effectiveness in hepatic fibrosis by inflencing the expression of liver fibrosis associated miRNAs [107,108]. Nowadays, the point of view that liver fibrosis can be reversal has been generally accepted [109] provided that the activated HSCs switch to a more quiescent HSC. Here we capture key advances in miRNA-based liver fibrosis study in order to raise potentials for therapy. HSCs contain bunches of vitamin A-riching lipid droplets, while activated HSCs lose cytoplasmic lipid droplets and trans-differentiate to proliferative, and fibrogenic myofibroblasts play an essential role in the formation of liver fibrosis [105]. A recent study based on down-regulation of miR-27a and 27b, two miRNAs that over-expressed in primary culture-activated rat HSCs documented that the culture-activated rat HSCs switch to a more quiescent HSC phenotype, with restored cytoplasmic lipid droplets and decreased cell proliferation [110]. Different from miR-27a and 27b, miR-29a and 29b are often downregulated in the formation of liver fibrosis, in vitro study showed that miR-29 as novel antifibrogenic mediators can repress collagen synthesis [111]. Although, it is the only example available, it may raise the curtain at the age of miRNA –based liver fibrosis therapy.

LIVER-SPECIFIC miRNA SIGNATURES IN LIVER DISEASE

Certain miRNAs are expressed ubiquitously, whereas others are expressed in a highly tissue-specific manner [112]. miR-122 accounting for 70% of the total miRNA population, is one of the birds specifically and abundantly expressed in the liver with undetected in all other tissues [112,113]. There is a long way to identify the liver-specific miRNA:miR-122. As the precursor for miR-122 was discovered in 1989. Furthermore, systematic cloning and sequencing of small RNAs prepared from different mouse tissues revealed that miR-122 was an abundant miRNA in the liver. The further study addressed that miR-122 is found in mouse, woodchuck and human livers, in human primary hepatocytes, and in cultured liver-derived cells, such as mouse Hepa 1-6 cells and human Huh7 cells [114]. Studies based on computational tools showed that the putative miR-122-target genes involved in cellular stress response [113], hepatocarcinogenesis [65, 115] and viral infection [99, 103], which were further experimentally confirmed in cultured hepatocytes. miR-122 plays an important role in the pathology of various diseases, including cancer, infection and metabolism disease. Analysis of RNAs from 20 human HCC samples showed that miR-122 was significantly down-regulated in 50% of the tumors compared to non-malignant liver tissue from the same individuals [116], which is reconfirmed by others [117]. Further study shows that miR-122 also plays an important role in intrahepatic metastasis. Overexpression of miR-122 by a lentiviral vector (lenti-122) in metastatic Mahlavu and SK-HEP-1 cells significantly reduced in vitro migration, invasion, and anchorage-independent growth as well as in vivo tumorigenesis, angiogenesis, and intrahepatic metastasis in an orthotopic liver cancer model [118]. Moreover, the infection of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) was also dependent on the status of miR-122 expression [99, 103]. A study carried out by Catherine L showed that HCV RNA can only replicate in cells expressing miR-122, but the replication failed to function. The role of miR-122 in HCV RNA replication was confirmed by silencing miR-122 in Huh7 cells with a marketed loss of replicating result [99]. At the same time, translation of HCV RNA is also certainly correlated with miR-122. Sequestration of miR-122 in liver cell lines strongly reduces HCV translation, whereas addition of miR-122 stimulates HCV translation in liver cell lines as well as in the non-liver HeLa cells and rabbit reticulocyte lysate. Further evaluating the role of miR-122 reveals that miR-122 stimulates HCV translation by enhancing the association of ribosomes with the viral RNA at an early initiation stage [103]. The overall importance of miR-122 in the regulation of metabolism has been elaborated through an antisense strategy specific to miR-122 so far [119]. Hepatic steatosis can be strikingly reduced in high-fat fed mice by silencing miR-122 in an antisense strategy based on a 2′-OMe phosphorothioate-modified oligonucleotide [119]. Similarly, silencing miR-122 also resulted in an increase in expression of several hundred genes, which were notably represented as putative miR-122 target genes, including those that are normally repressed in hepatocytes, as well as a decrease in expression of several genes, including those that are involved in cholesterol biosynthesis [119]. All these results argued for the importance of miR-122 in maintaining an adult-liver phenotype by regulating the expression of non-liver genes. As mentioned above, Liver-specific miRNA (miR-122) plays very important roles in the pathology of various liver diseases, which also implies miR-122 might serve as a potential therapeutic target. For instance, therapeutics based on inhibiting miR-122 have proven to be efficient in inhibiting viral replication both in vitro and in vivo over the last several years [91, 120]. The importance in function [119] and convenience in regulation [120-123], all together make therapeutics based on miR-122 attractive to be used in the liver disease. One potential therapeutic application comes from the effect of miR-122 antagomir in high-fat fed mice to reduce hepatic steatosis, which may provide an interesting opportunity to treat patients with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis [119]. Another interesting application of miR-122 antagomir contributes in taking advantage of its effect on the down-regulation of adult-liver genes expression to generate in vitro a new attractive expandable cell source for hepatocyte transplantation that would feature stem/progenitor cell phenotype [119]; the third attracting application of miR-122 antagomir contributes in inhibiting viral replication and translation, which may provide an interesting opportunity to treat patients with viral infection [99, 103].

miRNAs AS GENERAL ANTICANCER THERAPEUTICS

miRNAs modulating gene expression through sequence complementarity can influence a series of biological processes, including differentiation, proliferation, apoptosis, angiogenesis, invasion and metastasis. As the deregulation of these very same processes is a hallmark of cancer, on one hand, it directly suggests that miRNAs may work as putative tumor suppressor genes or oncogenes, and on the other hand, it indirectly indicates that efforts for cancer therapy should be focused on these putative tumor suppressor genes or oncogenes. Increasing data have documented the possibility that miRNAs-based treatment may be as promising anticancer therapeutics [70]. Here, we summerize the evidence available in HCC. To date, accumulating evidences have addressed that the putative tumor suppressor miRNAs may be the novel therapeutic entity for HCC, particularly for miR-26a [70], which is normally expressed at high levels in normal adult liver but dramatic downregulation in both human and murine liver tumors. A study based on miR-26a replacement by using AAV as delivery vector potently suppresses cancer cell proliferation and activates tumor-specific apoptosis in vivo, leading to dramatic suppression of tumor progression without toxicity, as miR-26a induces a G1 arrest in human liver cancer cells by downregulating cyclins D2 and E2 [70]. Similarly, in HCC, Osteopontin (OPN) is identified as one of the leading genes that promote the metastasis of HCC [124]. A recent study based on lentiviral vectors encoding microRNA against OPN reveals that silencing OPN can dramatically inhibits in both in vitro invasion and in vivo lung metastasis of HCCLM3 cells, even could suppress in vitro proliferation and in vivo tumor growth of HCCLM3 by interrupting MAPK pathway and NF-κB pathway [125], which suggests that OPN could be a hopeful target for the control of metastasis as well as HCC tumor growth and viral vector-mediated microRNA against OPN can be treated as a new therapeutics. Among other putative tumor suppressor miRNAs, miR-101 [64, 126], miR-122 and miR-223 are of particular interest. The miR-101 is significantly down-regulated in the majority of cancer cell lines and cancer tissues examined. By targeting Mcl-1 [64], an antiapoptotic member of Bcl-2 family [127], and repressing the expression of the FOS oncogene [126], miR-101 not only suppresses colony formation in vitro and tumorigenicity in vivo but also sensitizes cancer cells to apoptosis induced by various chemotherapeutic drugs. Therefore, miR-101 could be a hopeful target for not only anticancer therapy but also a prognostic molecular marker for diagnose. The liver-specific miRNA, miR-122, could be detected as early as 12.5 days post-implantation and reaches a plateau immediately before birth [113], suggesting that miR-122 may play a critical role in liver development. Recent studies [65,118] showed that miR-122 is significantly down-regulated in liver cancer, which may function as tumor suppressor. By restoring miR-122 in metastatic Mahlavu and SK-HEP-1 cells, migration, invasion in vitro as well as tumorigenesis, angiogenesis, and intrahepatic metastasis in vivo are significantly inhibited [118]. Further study addressed that miR-122 inhibits hepatocellular carcinoma intrahepatic metastasis by modulating ADAM17 (a disintegrin and metalloprotease 17), a key component in angiogenesis. Besides, miR-122 can target the 3′-UTR of cyclin G1 (CCNG1) mRNA for its regulation. An inverse correlation between miR-122 and CCNG1 exists in primary liver carcinoma, further emphasizing the importance of miR-122 in HCC pathogenesis [65]. It is not more than a beginning. There are many novel miR-122 targets unidentified. A recent study by using miRNA-like siRNA expression vectors provides evidence that miR-122 can directly repress the Bcl-w protein level by targeting binding sites in the 3′-UTR [128]. Furthermore, ADAM10 (a distintegrin and metalloprotease family 10), serum response factor (SRF), and insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (Igf1R) were all validated as targets of miR-122 [129]. The study carried out by Coulouarn emphasized miR-122 as a diagnostic and prognostic marker for HCC progression, such a point of view reached by the fact that loss of miR-122 results in an increase of cell migration and invasion and that restoration of miR-122 reverses this phenotype [130,131]. In addition, the loss of miR-122 is associated with liver-enriched transcription factors, such as HNF1A, HNF3A and HNF3B [130]. All these data suggest miR-122 plays a very important role in liver cancer, which is also an attractive therapy target for liver cancer. Similar to miR-122, miR-223 is also significantly down-regulated in HCC. Re-expression of miR-223 in HBV, HCV, and non-HBV non-HCV-related HCC cell lines revealed a consistent inhibitory effect on cell viability. Further study implicated that Stathmin 1 (STMN1) is a downstream target of miR-223. The substantial reduction in STMN1 protein was demonstrated upon restoration of miR-223 expression in HCC cell lines [132]. Therefore, miR-223 may represent a novel target in liver cancer therapy because it regulates STMN1, which is a good marker of the PTEN/PI3K path-way activity. miRNAs, which are amplified or overexpressed in cancer could act as putative oncogenes or miRNAs that targets one or more tumor suppressor genes to inhibit the activity of an anti-oncogenic pathway. The miR-21 is one of the chief actors. Different from the putative tumor suppressor miRNAs mentioned above, miR-21 is always highly over-expressed in HCC [58, 61, 63, 117]. Inhibition of miR-21 in cultured HCC cells increased expression of the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) tumor suppressor, and decreased tumor cell proliferation, migration, and invasion [117]. Consistent with the results, an increase in tumor cell proliferation, migration, and invasion was observed in tumor cells transfected with precursor miR-21 [117]. Another study based on antisense oligonucleotides specific for miR-21 presented the idea that miR-21 played an important role in the maintenance of the malignant transformation of hepatocytes [133]. All these data showed that overexpression of miR-21 can contribute to HCC growth and spread by modulating PTEN expression. PTEN is a direct target of miR-21 and silencing miR-21 maybe a newly attractive therapeutics. Another interesting case in consideration is miR-221, similar as reported in other tumors [134], miR-221 is observed to be up-regulated also in HCC. Besides, the previously reported targets p27 and p57 [135], miR-221 can inhibit apoptosis by targeting Bmf, up-expression coupled with affecting multiple pro-oncogenic pathways indicate that miR-221 is a potential target for nonconventional treatment against HCC [136]. In vivo study based on a mouse model of liver cancer carried out by Pineau et al. addressed that miR-221 overexpression stimulates growth of tumorigenic murine hepatic progenitor cells by turely regulating DNA damage-inducible transcript 4 (DDIT4), a modulator of mTOR pathway [137]. Garofalo et al. further demonstrated that miR-221 could induce TRAIL resistance and enhance cellular migration through the activation of the AKT pathway and metallopeptidases by targeting PTEN and TIMP3 tumor suppressors [138]. To sum up the points, therapeutics based on miRNA is a potential therapy for HCC, even most of the possible pathways regulated by these miRNAs are still unclear. However, it will not blurr the possibility of treating miRNAs as general anticancer therapeutics, as strategies based on either silencing or restoring a miRNA in suppression of tumor progression, migration, invasion tumorigenesis, angiogenesis, and intrahepatic metastasis prove to be significantly effective. Moreover, not only silencing a miRNA in using antisense oligonucleotides specific but also restoring a miRNA in using viral vectors proved to be perfectly available. Here, we can boldly give prophesy that therapeutics based on miRNA will have an infinitely bright future.

miRNAs AND VECTOR LIVER-TARGETING

As stated, RNAi based on siRNA and miRNA could be one of the most promising avenues for the development of antiviral therapies and anticancer therapies. The success of RNAi in therapeutic application also depends on an efficient delivery system, which can support long-term siRNA production and continuous gene silencing. So far, the most powerful gene therapy vectors come from viruses with several steps of modification, as an ideal delivery system, gene therapy vector should be targeted specifcally such that they transduce target cells, while avoiding sequestration in other organs or toxicity from infection of unwanted cells. Considerable methods including transcriptional targeting [139], transductional targeting [140] and translational targeting [141], have been used for vector targeting. However, none is effective to all the vectors. Vector targeting by engineering the cassettes to contain miRNA target (miRT) elements that can then be recognized and regulated by endogenous cellular miRNAs has greatly attracted much attention. Here, we present the evidence available that miRNAs can be used for vector liver-targeting. Nowadays, an increasing evidence suggested that tissue-specific miRNAs play essential roles in regulating vector liver-targeting. One potential application comes from the impact of vector containing tissue-specific miRT elements in the specific tissue to shut down capsid genes expression, which provide an interesting opportunity to systematically reduce/eliminate the effects of potential contaminating from replication competent virus during virus vector-mediated gene therapy [142] (Fig. ). Another interesting application of tissue-specific miRNAs consist in taking advantage of its effect on the down-regulation of transgene expression in hematopoietic lineages to escape immune response. Currently, one of the major barriers to stable gene transfer is the development of transgene-specific immunity [143] because of the direct expression of the transgene product within professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) of the immune system [144]. Even tissue-specific promoters are used, immune reaction can still be observed. A recent study [145] based on lentiviral vectors encoding target sequences for hematopoietic specific mir-142-3p documented that, by preventing transgene expression in hematopoietic lineages while permitting high levels of expression in nonhematopoietic cells, miRNA regulation could enable stable gene transfer in the absence of an immune response [146]. The rational application was reconfirmed by others [146-148]. The third attractive application of tissue-specific miRNAs in vector liver-targeting comes from gene therapy, based on oncolytic viruses to reduce hepatotoxicity. By incorporating a casette that contains sequences complementary to the liver-specific miR-122 in the 3′UTR of the E1A gene, the recombinant adenovirus replicated normally in other cells but not in cells of hepatic origin [149-151]. Moreover, suicide gene therapy based on Ad vectors that mediate miR-122a-regulated HSVtk expression can be more safe and efficient by reducing hepatotoxicity perfectly [152]. As is known to all, miRNAs always signature in various diseases characterized by deregulation of miRNAs. Especially in cancer, oncogenic miRNAs are found to be ubiquitously expressed in normal tissues, but highly enriched in tumors, while tumor suppressor miRNAs specifically downregulated in cancer. Therefore, target elements to be tumor suppressor miRNAs responsive engineered within a vector can increase gene silencing in normal tissue, leaving gene expressing in cancer specially. For example, let-7, miR-143 and miR-145, as putative tumor suppressor miRNAs, are proved to be low expression in certain cancer cells [153]. The regulation based on either let-7 or miR-143 and miR-145 endows wild-type viral tumor-specific replication while eliminates undesirable replication and associated toxicity in normal cells [154,155]. All these data suggest that vector targeting regulated by miRNA could be not only tumor-specific but also few hepatotoxicity and immune response. It is therefore expected to be of a major utility for the generation of liver-targeted expression vectors.

CONCLUSION AND PROSPECTIVE

Identification of miRNA function involved in liver cancer has provided an important knowledge regarding miRNA-tumor associated gene interactions and revealed many potential therapeutic targets. As documented in many studies, some miRNAs may function as oncogenes while others act as tumor suppressors. For oncogenic miRNAs, such as miR-21, a desirable therapeutic strategy, reduce their functions in cells. As for tumor suppress miRNAs, restoring that miRNA should provide the attractive outcome. Despite remarkable progress in miRNA-based therapy, many questions remain to be answered. The first nut for us to crack is that we should have a clear understanding of the exact mechanism to be responsive to miRNA regulation and the physiological function in the course of the life cycle. It is rarely known very little about the cellular circuits controlled by miRNAs in general and by cancer-associated miRNAs in particular. Efforts should be made to check the true frequency of mutations in miRNAs and in their target sequences. Besides, computational methods should be adopted to get a more comprehensive understanding of their mechanism of action. Only in this way, can we get a clearer picture of the role of miRNAs in human cancer. Different miRNAs are expressed at different copy numbers, the same miRNA is expressed at different copy numbers in different cell lineages. What interests us most is that the threshold copy of miRNAs must be reached to achieve appreciable gene silencing. However, there is less data available for reference. As one of the most promising avenues for the development of anticancer therapies, the success of miRNA in therapeutic application relies on an efficient delivery system. Nowadays, vector targeting is still one of the major barriers to achieve stable gene transfer. Gathering studies suggest vector targeting by engineering the cassettes to contain miRNA target (miRT) elements that could then be recognized and regulated by endogenous cellular miRNAs is very effective and versatile, although, much work remains to be done on the exact number of copies and the spacing elements between tandem copies of miRT elements, which will prove the most effcacious for vector targeting. The rAAV mediated gene therapy is considered to be the appealing approach for liver disease. Nevertheless, immune response induced by capsid synthesis in targeting tissues from residual contaminating replication competent AAV particles often shut down the function gene expression. To systematically reduce/eliminate the effects of potential contaminating rcAAV particles, our laboratory designed a novel AAV helper (pH22mir) with a microRNA binding cassette containing multiple copies of liver specific (hsa-mir-122) and hematopoietic specific (has-mir-142-3p) sequences to specifically control cap gene expression [142]. In the liver, 99.9% of capsid expression could be suppressed and no cap expression could be detected by the Western blot. Overall, it is difficult to overestimate the potential impact of the regulatory circuits of miRNAs in the liver, which may provide attractive targets for treatment of liver cancer.
Table 1.

miRNA Expression Profiles in HCC Compared with Normal Liver

miRNA ClassmiRNALiver-tumor dysregulationSpecial in HCC [61]
Murakami(2006) [57]Jiang(2008) [58]Huang(2008) [61]Ladeiro(2008) [63]Su(2009) [64]Gramantieri(2007) [65]Huang(2009) [66]
hsa-miR-18miR-18UpUp
precursor miR-18Up
hsa-miR-21miR-21UpUpUp
hsa-miR-33miR-33Up
hsa-miR-101miR-101DownDown
hsa-miR-130miR-130bUpUp
miR-130aDownUp
hsa-miR-135miR-135aUp
hsa-miR-139miR-139Down
hsa-miR-150miR-150Down
hsa-miR-199miR-199aDownDownDown
miR-199a*DownDown
miR-199bDown
hsa-miR-200miR-200aDownDown
miR-200bDown
miR-200cDown
hsa-miR-214miR-214Down
hsa-miR-221miR-221UpUp
hsa-miR-223miR-223Down
hsa-miR-301miR-301Up
hsa-miR-224miR-224UpUpUp
hsa-miR-125miR-125aDownDown
hsa-miR-235miR-235Down
hsa-miR-22miR-22Up
mmu-miR-126miR-126UpDown
miR-126-3pUpDown
hsa-let-7let-7bUpDownDown
let-7cUpDownDown
let-7gUpDownDown
let-7iUpDownDown
let-7fUpDownDown
let-7dUpDownDown
let-7eUpDownDown
let-7a-1UpDownDown
let-7a-2UpDownDown
let-7a-3UpDownDown
hsa-miR-124miR-124a-2DownDown
hsa-miR-132miR-132Down
hsa-miR-136miR-136Down
hsa-miR-141miR-141Down
hsa-miR-142miR-142DownDown
hsa-miR-143miR-143DownDown
hsa-miR-145miR-145Down
hsa-miR-150miR-150Down
hsa-miR-155miR-155Down
hsa-miR-181miR-181a-1Down
miR-181a-2Down
miR-181cDown
hsa-miR-122miR-122aDownDown
hsa-miR-98miR-98Up
rno-miR-352miR-352Up
hsa-miR-195miR-195DownUpDown
hsa-miR-523miR-523Yes
hsa-miR-34miR-34aYes
rno-miR-146miR-146Yes
hsa-miR-121miR-121Yes
hsa-miR-526miR-526aYes
hsa-miR-30miR-30dYes
hsa-miR-146miR-146bYes
hsa-miR-148miR-148aYes
rno-miR-17miR-17UpYes
hsa-miR-215miR-215Yes
hsa-miR-192miR-192Yes
hsa-miR-93miR-93Yes
hsa-miR-107miR-107UpYes
hsa-miR-29miR-29aYes
hsa-miR-103miR-103Yes
hsa-miR-146miR-146aYes
hsa-miR-15miR-15aDownYes
hsa-miR-203miR-203Down
hsa-miR-10miR-10bUp
hsa-miR-222miR-222UpUp
hsa-miR-375miR-375Down
hsa-miR-96miR-96Up
  147 in total

Review 1.  Hepatocellular carcinoma: therapy and prevention.

Authors:  Hubert E Blum
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2005-12-21       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 2.  Not miR-ly small RNAs: big potential for microRNAs in therapy.

Authors:  Tara M Love; Howell F Moffett; Carl D Novina
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 10.793

3.  The role of microRNA genes in papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Authors:  Huiling He; Krystian Jazdzewski; Wei Li; Sandya Liyanarachchi; Rebecca Nagy; Stefano Volinia; George A Calin; Chang-Gong Liu; Kaarle Franssila; Saul Suster; Richard T Kloos; Carlo M Croce; Albert de la Chapelle
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-12-19       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 4.  VSV-tumor selective replication and protein translation.

Authors:  Glen N Barber
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2005-11-21       Impact factor: 9.867

5.  Expression of miR-122 mediated by adenoviral vector induces apoptosis and cell cycle arrest of cancer cells.

Authors:  Leina Ma; Jia Liu; Junjie Shen; Li Liu; Jia Wu; Wei Li; Jingjing Luo; Qing Chen; Cheng Qian
Journal:  Cancer Biol Ther       Date:  2010-04-01       Impact factor: 4.742

6.  TLR4 enhances TGF-beta signaling and hepatic fibrosis.

Authors:  Ekihiro Seki; Samuele De Minicis; Christoph H Osterreicher; Johannes Kluwe; Yosuke Osawa; David A Brenner; Robert F Schwabe
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2007-10-21       Impact factor: 53.440

7.  Large-scale analysis of the genetic and epigenetic alterations in hepatocellular carcinoma from Southeast China.

Authors:  Hang Su; Jing Zhao; Yujuan Xiong; Teng Xu; Fan Zhou; Yunfei Yuan; Ying Zhang; Shi-Mei Zhuang
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  2008-02-14       Impact factor: 2.433

8.  Elevated expression of the miR-17-92 polycistron and miR-21 in hepadnavirus-associated hepatocellular carcinoma contributes to the malignant phenotype.

Authors:  Erin Connolly; Margherita Melegari; Pablo Landgraf; Tatyana Tchaikovskaya; Bud C Tennant; Betty L Slagle; Leslie E Rogler; Mihaela Zavolan; Thomas Tuschl; Charles E Rogler
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2008-08-07       Impact factor: 4.307

9.  Cyclin G1 is a target of miR-122a, a microRNA frequently down-regulated in human hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Laura Gramantieri; Manuela Ferracin; Francesca Fornari; Angelo Veronese; Silvia Sabbioni; Chang-Gong Liu; George A Calin; Catia Giovannini; Eros Ferrazzi; Gian Luca Grazi; Carlo M Croce; Luigi Bolondi; Massimo Negrini
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2007-07-01       Impact factor: 12.701

10.  Combined hypermethylation and chromosome loss associated with inactivation of SSI-1/SOCS-1/JAB gene in human hepatocellular carcinomas.

Authors:  Hisaki Nagai; Yong Sung Kim; Noboru Konishi; Masaru Baba; Takeo Kubota; Akihiko Yoshimura; Mitsuru Emi
Journal:  Cancer Lett       Date:  2002-12-01       Impact factor: 8.679

View more
  18 in total

Review 1.  Role of microRNAs in endothelial inflammation and senescence.

Authors:  Bing Qin; Huan Yang; Bo Xiao
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2011-09-28       Impact factor: 2.316

Review 2.  MicroRNAs and HIV-1: complex interactions.

Authors:  Zachary Klase; Laurent Houzet; Kuan-Teh Jeang
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2012-10-05       Impact factor: 5.157

3.  Evaluation of miR-122-regulated suicide gene therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma in an orthotopic mouse model.

Authors:  Gang Wang; Xiaoyan Dong; Wenhong Tian; Yue Lu; Jianyan Hu; Yunfan Liu; Jie Yuchi; Xiaobing Wu
Journal:  Chin J Cancer Res       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 5.087

4.  Targeted imaging and induction of apoptosis of drug-resistant hepatoma cells by miR-122-loaded graphene-InP nanocompounds.

Authors:  Xin Zeng; Yi Yuan; Ting Wang; Han Wang; Xianyun Hu; Ziyi Fu; Gen Zhang; Bin Liu; Guangming Lu
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2017-01-23       Impact factor: 10.435

Review 5.  MicroRNAs: history, biogenesis, and their evolving role in animal development and disease.

Authors:  M Bhaskaran; M Mohan
Journal:  Vet Pathol       Date:  2013-09-17       Impact factor: 2.221

6.  MiRNA-mediated tumor specific delivery of TRAIL reduced glioma growth.

Authors:  Yongli Bo; Guocai Guo; Weicheng Yao
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2013-01-22       Impact factor: 4.130

7.  miR-122 regulates collagen production via targeting hepatic stellate cells and suppressing P4HA1 expression.

Authors:  Jiang Li; Mohammed Ghazwani; Yifei Zhang; Jianqin Lu; Jilong Li; Jie Fan; Chandrashekhar R Gandhi; Song Li
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2012-11-21       Impact factor: 25.083

8.  Illuminating microRNA Transcription from the Epigenome.

Authors:  Praveen Sethupathy
Journal:  Curr Genomics       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 2.236

Review 9.  Real time dynamic imaging and current targeted therapies in the war on cancer: a new paradigm.

Authors:  Ramasamy Paulmurugan; Bryan Oronsky; Chad F Brouse; Tony Reid; Susan Knox; Jan Scicinski
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2013-05-25       Impact factor: 11.556

10.  In-Silico Algorithms for the Screening of Possible microRNA Binding Sites and Their Interactions.

Authors:  Harsh Dweep; Carsten Sticht; Norbert Gretz
Journal:  Curr Genomics       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 2.236

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.