| Literature DB >> 24815829 |
Shuhei Komatsu1, Daisuke Ichikawa, Hiroki Takeshita, Ryo Morimura, Shoji Hirajima, Masahiro Tsujiura, Tsutomu Kawaguchi, Mahito Miyamae, Hiroaki Nagata, Hirotaka Konishi, Atsushi Shiozaki, Eigo Otsuji.
Abstract
MicroRNAs have been reported to be stably detectable in plasma/serum and to exhibit resistance to endogenous ribonuclease activity because of binding to proteins such as Argonaute-2 and high-density lipoprotein, or being packed by secretory particles such as exosomes. These secretory particles include specific microRNAs and can function as intercellular transmitters. These findings could open-up a new and promising field in the use of circulating microRNAs for cancer treatment. In particular, miR-18a, which is located in the potentially oncogenic miR-17-92 cluster, is a highly expressed microRNAs in several types of cancers. The concentration of miR-18a in plasma/serum of patients with cancer such as esophageal (AUC=0.944), pancreatic (AUC=0.936), hepatocellular (AUC=0.881), colorectal and other types of cancers is much higher than that of healthy volunteers. Such reports provide evidence that circulating miR-18 might be a next-generation biomarker and contribute to cancer screening in non-invasive liquid biopsy, to a clinically-satisfactory degree of sensitivity and specificity.Entities:
Keywords: liquid biopsy; microRNAs; plasma biomarker; review
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24815829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: In Vivo ISSN: 0258-851X Impact factor: 2.155