| Literature DB >> 22191027 |
Abstract
Dysregulation of microRNAs (miRNAs), particularly their downregulation, has been widely shown to be associated with the development of lung cancer. Downregulation of miRNAs leads to the overactivation of their oncogene targets, while upregulation of some miRNAs leads to inhibition of important tumor suppressors. Research has implicated cigarette smoke in miRNA dysregulation, leading to carcinogenesis. Cigarette smoke may lead to genetic or epigenetic damage to miRNAs, many of which map to fragile sites and some of which contain single nucleotide polymorphisms. Cigarette smoke may also cause dysregulation by affecting regulatory mechanisms controlling miRNA expression. Researchers have shown a correlation between smoke-exposure-induced dysregulation of miRNAs and age. Furthermore, dysregulation seems to be associated with intensity and duration of smoke exposure and duration of cessation. Longer exposure at a threshold level is needed for irreversibility of changes in expression. Better understanding of miRNA dysregulation may allow for improved biomonitoring and treatment regimens for lung cancer.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22191027 PMCID: PMC3236311 DOI: 10.1155/2012/791234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Med ISSN: 2090-1844
Important miRNAs significantly dysregulated by cigarette smoke and implicated in carcinogenesis [8, 14, 32, 36].
| miRNA | Targets | Biological effects of dysregulation | Comments on dysregulation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Downregulated | |||
|
| |||
|
| Ras, CDK6, cyclin A2 | Ras oncogene activation, cell proliferation, angiogenesis | Normally, |
|
| TGF | TGF overexpression, angiogenesis | Greater downregulation in postweanling female mice |
|
| EFG pathway, NF- | Cell cycle progression, cell adhesion, protein repair, EFG activation, stress response (NF- | Downregulated in both humans and rats |
|
| EFG pathway, NF- | Chemoresistance, cell cycle progression, cell adhesion, protein repair, EFG activation, stress response (NF- | Downregulation leads to chemoresistance mediated through MDR-1 |
|
| CDK4, CDK6, cyclin E2, and E2F3 | Cell cycle arrest inhibited | Mutations in p53 can lead to its downregulation |
|
| heme-oxygenase 1 | Increased antioxidant activity in liver and lungs | Involved in stress response |
|
| ERBB7 (gene for EGFR) | ERBB7 oncogene activation | Maps to fragile site with G/U polymorphism |
|
| p53 pathway | Cell cycle arrest inhibited | Greater downregulated in postweanling female mice |
|
| Ras pathway | Ras oncogene activation, cell proliferation | Downregulation is persistent for at least one week after cessation |
|
| |||
| Upregulated | |||
|
| |||
|
| Zinc finger protein 697, AT-rich interactive domain 4A | Increase in transcription | Upregulated 10.4-fold in Izzotti et al. [ |
Figure 1Simplified overview of the mechanisms by which cigarette smoke induces dysregulation of miRNA (red arrows) and subsequent carcinogenesis. CS can lead to genetic mutations in miRNA transcriptional regulators, like P53. Dysregulation of P53, an activator of miRNA transcription, leads to downregulation of miRNA, like miR-34. CS can also lead to epigenetic or genetic mutations in the miRNA gene itself, leading to dysregulation of transcription. Both downregulation and upregulation of miRNA can allow for cell proliferation if the miRNA is a tumor suppressor or oncogene, respectively. The red arrows indicate direct action of CS on miRNA production. The red “X's” indicate inhibition of a normal process (indicated by black arrows).
Figure 2Persistence of miRNA in lung tissue: cartoon of a graph adapted from [36] of the intensity of expression of 697 miRNAs in the lung tissue of untreated mice or mice exposed to 438 mg/m3 TPM of cigarette smoke for 4 weeks. The mice were sacrificed either immediately (1 day) or 1 week after cessation. The blue to red gradient represents the least to most intense miRNA expressions, respectively. The graph reveals that most of the changes in miRNA expression were reversed after 1 week of cessation.