| Literature DB >> 23325049 |
Ioannis Grammatikakis1, Myriam Gorospe, Kotb Abdelmohsen.
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are potent post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression. In mammalian cells, miRNAs typically suppress mRNA stability and/or translation through partial complementarity with target mRNAs. Each miRNA can regulate a wide range of mRNAs, and a single mRNA can be regulated by multiple miRNAs. Through these complex regulatory interactions, miRNAs participate in many cellular processes, including carcinogenesis. By altering gene expression patterns, cancer cells can develop specific phenotypes that allow them to proliferate, survive, secure oxygen and nutrients, evade immune recognition, invade other tissues and metastasize. At the same time, cancer cells acquire miRNA signature patterns distinct from those of normal cells; the differentially expressed miRNAs contribute to enabling the cancer traits. Over the past decade, several miRNAs have been identified, which functioned as oncogenic miRNAs (oncomiRs) or tumor-suppressive miRNAs (TS-miRNAs). In this review, we focus specifically on TS-miRNAs and their effects on well-established cancer traits. We also discuss the rising interest in TS-miRNAs in cancer therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23325049 PMCID: PMC3565350 DOI: 10.3390/ijms14011822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Tumor-suppressive miRNAs (TS-miRNAs) involved in oncogenic traits. The table lists the TS-miRNAs discussed in this review, categorized by cancer trait (column 1), the oncogenic proteins encoded by TS-miRNA target mRNAs (column 2), the tumors in which TS-miRNAs have been characterized (column 3) and representatively referenced (column 4).
| TS-miRNAs | Cancer-related proteins encoded by mRNAs that are TS-miRNA targets | Cancer models implicating TS-miRNAs | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-34a | Bcl-2, SirT1 | breast cancer, glioma stem cells (GSCs) | [ |
| miR-17-5p | AIB1 | breast cancer | [ |
| miR-125a | HuR | breast carcinoma cell lines | [ |
| miR-519 | HuR | cervical, colon, ovarian, lung, kidney cancer | [ |
| miR-125b | Ets1, Bcl-2 | breast cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma | [ |
| miR-28 | Cyclin D1 | colorectal cancer | [ |
| miR-296 | HMGA1 | prostate cancer | [ |
| miR-148b | CCKBR | gastric cancer | [ |
| miR-135a | JAK2 | gastric cancer | [ |
| miR-146a | FADD, EGFR, ROCK1, NOTCH1, CXCR4, TRAF6 | glioblastoma and breast, pancreatic, gastric, prostate cancer glioblastoma | [ |
| miR-145 | VEGF-A, N-Ras, 70S6K1, FSCN1 | Kaposi’s sarcoma, T lymphocyte Jurkat cells, leukemia, extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma | [ |
| miR-128 | EGFR, PDGFRα | colon and breast cancer, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | [ |
| miR-101 | EZH2 | glioma | [ |
| miR-143, miR-145 | Bcl-2, Top2A, PRC1, Plk1 | bladder transitional cell carcinoma | [ |
| miR-24 | S100A8 | liposarcoma | [ |
| miR-216b | K-Ras | laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma | [ |
| miR-34a | Bcl2, SirT1, BIRC3, DcR3, c-Met, Notch-1, Notch-2, Cyclin D1, Cyclin E2, Cdk4, Cdk6, E2F | brain tumors, glioma stem cell lines, breast, colon, pancreatic cancer | [ |
| miR-181d | K-Ras, Bcl-2 | glioma | [ |
| miR-451 | Cyclin D1, Bcl-2, Akt1, MMP-2, MMP-9 | glioblastoma | [ |
| miR-145 | VEGF-A, N-Ras, p70S6K1 | colon and breast cancer | [ |
| miR-128 | p70S6K1 | glioma | [ |
| miR-205 | VEGF-A | glioma | [ |
| miR-519c | HIF-1α, HuR | lung, breast, cervical, colon, ovarian cancer | [ |
| miR-340 | c-Met | breast cancer | [ |
| miR-29b | MMP-2 | hepatocellular carcinoma | [ |
| miR-9 | MMP-14 | neuroblastoma | [ |
| miR-322 | galectin-3 | breast, lung, prostate, kidney cancer | [ |
| miR-181a | TGFBR1, TGFBRAP1 | mesenchymal stem cells | [ |
| miR-335 | MAPK1, ROCK1 | neuroblastoma | [ |
| miR-148a | ROCK1 | gastric cancer | [ |
| miR-106a | IL-10, E2F1 | T lymphocyte Jurkat cells, glioma | [ |
| let-7a | STAT3 | hepatocellular carcinoma | [ |
| miR-17-5p | STAT3 | MDSCs | [ |
| miR-20a | STAT3 | MDSCs | [ |
| miR-93 | Genes of the TGF-β and/or STAT3 pathway | breast cancer | [ |
| miR-9 | PNP | Melanoma | [ |
| miR-1 | NF-κB | prostate cancer | |
| miR-200 | ZEB1 | colorectal cancer | [ |
| miR-340 | c-Met | breast cancer | [ |
| miR-34a | c-Met | breast cancer, melanoma | [ |
| miR-29b | MMP-2 | hepatocellular carcinoma | [ |
| miR-145 | VEGF, N-Ras | breast cancer | [ |
| miR-205 | VEGF-A | glioblastoma | [ |
| miR-183 | villin 2 (Ezrin), | breast cancer | [ |
| miR-296 | HMGA1 | prostate cancer | [ |
| miR-96 | KRAS | pancreatic cancer | [ |
| miR-216b | KRAS | nasopharyngeal carcinoma | [ |
| miR-195 | E2F3, CCND3 | glioblastoma | [ |
| miR-150 | MUC4 | pancreatic cancer | [ |
| miR-30c | MTA1 | endometrial cancer | [ |
Figure 1TS-miRNAs and their target mRNAs encoding proteins that enable cancer traits. Boxes depict five major cancer traits: Growth and Proliferation (blue), Cell Survival (red), Angiogenesis (green), Suppression of Immune Recognition (brown) and Invasion and Metastasis (purple). For each cancer trait, TS-miRNAs are indicated in white, the pro-oncogenic proteins encoded by mRNAs that are targets of TS-miRNAs are indicated in yellow and the cancer traits in orange.