| Literature DB >> 24910775 |
Jahangir Abdi1, Lugui Qiu2, Hong Chang3.
Abstract
The established interaction between multiple myeloma cells and bone marrow microenvironment components provides malignant cells with various survival, growth and drug resistance signals. As a new concept, identification of miRNAs and their related gene/protein targets, signaling molecules and pathways in the context of bone marrow microenvironment will help understanding more deeply the pathogenesis of the disease and possible mechanisms underlying environment-induced drug resistance. Recent studies suggest that bone marrow stromal cells can modulate some miRNAs (miR-21, miR-15a/16) in multiple myeloma cells through direct adhesion, cytokine secretion or transfer of miRNA-containing exosomes, however; the specific miRNA targets are not clear. In spite of a remarkable progress in understanding myeloma biology and therapy, the disease persists to be hard to treat. This review will discuss the most recent findings on miRNAs expression and function in the context of bone marrow microenvironment highlighting the miRNAs as potential therapeutic targets in multiple myeloma.Entities:
Keywords: Bone marrow stroma; CAMDR; Multiple myeloma; miRNA
Year: 2014 PMID: 24910775 PMCID: PMC4048053 DOI: 10.1186/2050-7771-2-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Expression and relevant regulatory functions of some investigated miRs in MM cells in the context of BMME components
| miR-15a/16 | Down-regulated | Regulating MM cell proliferation through AKT3, MAPKs and NFκB pathways and by targeting cyclin D1, cyclin D2 and CDC25A | [ |
| miR-15a/16 | Down-regulated | induction of BMSC-mediated drug resistance in MM cells, possibly through IL-6 | [ |
| miR-21 | Up-regulated | Induction of BMSC-mediated drug resistance in MM cells partially through NFκB pathway and by targeting RhoB | [ |
| miR-199a-5p | Down-regulated | Regulating bone marrow angiogenesis through targeting HIF-1α in MM cells and modulating interaction with BMSCs and bone marrow endothelial cells | [ |
| miR-135b | Up-regulated | Up-regulated in MM bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells following interaction with MM cells, impairing osteogenesis by targeting SMAD5 | [ |
| miR-199a, -24-3p, 15a-5p, 16-5p | Down-regulated | Down-regulated in MM mesenchymal cells, contributing to impaired osteogenesis | [ |
Figure 1Postulated schematic model indicating how BMSCs might influence expression and function of miRs in MM cells. Following adhesion, integrin-mediated signaling in MM cells triggers activation of various pathways (mostly NFB, PI3K/Akt/mTOR, and Ras/MAPK). It is still not known whether miRs associate with these pathways, whether modulation of miR gene expression occurs through these pathways, and whether they induce some epigenetic mechanisms controlling expression of miRs. It has also been shown that BMSCs can transfer miR-containing (15a) exosomes into MM cells to induce cell growth and proliferation. IL-6 has also been demonstrated to mediate miR-15a suppression in MM cells following adhesion to BMSCs, but how this cytokine triggers such a response is not clear. Moreover, targets reported for some miRs (miR-21) in MM cells, were not explored in BMME context, hence the potential targets of miRs in MM cells adhered to BMSCs are not well characterized yet nor is there any information showing how these targets are affected by a putative integrin-miR axis. To identify potential targets of miRs in MM cell-BMSC interaction, further exploration is required. Additionally, adhesion of MM cells to BMSCs has been shown to modulate some miRs in BMSCs, leading to other disease-related complications such as angiogenesis and defective osteogenesis. However, to identify potential targets of miRs in MM cell-BMSC interaction, further exploration is required.