| Literature DB >> 25601903 |
Xin Qin1, Haisheng Xu2, Wenrong Gong3, Wenbin Deng4.
Abstract
The focus of this review is to provide an update on the progress of microRNAs (miRNAs) as potential biomarkers for lung cancer. miRNAs are single-stranded, small non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression and show tissue-specific signatures. Accumulating evidence indicates that miRNA expression patterns represent the in vivo status in physiology and disease. Moreover, miRNAs are stable in serum and other clinically convenient and available tissue sources, so they are being developed as biomarkers for cancer and other diseases. Cancer is currently the primary driver of the field, but miRNA biomarkers are being developed for many other diseases such as cardiovascular and central nervous system diseases. Here, we examine the framework and scope of the miRNA landscape as it specifically relates to the translation of miRNA expression patterns/signatures into biomarkers for developing diagnostics for lung cancer. We focus on examining tumor cytosol miRNAs, fluid miRNAs, and exosome miRNAs in lung cancer, the connections among these miRNAs, and the potential of miRNA biomarkers for the development of diagnostics. In lung cancer, miRNAs have been studied in both cell populations and in the circulation. However, a major challenge is to develop biomarkers to monitor cancer development and to identify circulating miRNAs that are linked to cancer stage. Importantly, the fact that miRNAs can be successfully harvested from biological fluids allows for the development of biofluid biopsies, in which miRNAs as circulating biomarkers can be captured and analyzed ex vivo. Our hope is that these minimally invasive entities provide a window to the in vivo milieu of the patients without the need for costly, complex invasive procedures, rapidly moving miRNAs from research to the clinic.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; lung cancer; microRNA
Year: 2015 PMID: 25601903 PMCID: PMC4283433 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Selected microRNA signatures in lung cancer and their potential value in clinic.
| miRNA | Location | Signature | Potential value in clinic | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| let-7 | Tumor tissues | ↓ | Diagnosis marker | ( |
| miR-17-92 | ↑ | Diagnosis marker | ( | |
| miR-218 | ↓ | Diagnosis marker | ( | |
| miR-21 | ↑ | Diagnosis marker and metastasis marker | ( | |
| miR-34a miR-34b/c | ↓ | Diagnosis marker | ( | |
| miR-200 family | ↑ | Metastasis marker | ( | |
| miR-125a-3p/5p | ↓ | Pathological stage indicator and metastasis marker | ( | |
| miR-106b-25 cluster | ↑ | Diagnosis marker | ( | |
| miR-181b | ↑ | Predictor for drug resistance to Cisplatin | ( | |
| miR-181a | ||||
| miR-630 | ||||
| miR-17-5p | ↑ | Predictor for drug resistance to paclitaxel | ( | |
| miR-145 | ↑ | Predictor for drug resistance to Gefitinib | ( | |
| miR-25 | Body fluids | ↑ | Early diagnostic marker | ( |
| miR-223 | ↑ | Early diagnostic marker | ( | |
| miR-141 | ↑ | Early diagnostic marker | ( | |
| miR-155 | ↑ | Early diagnostic marker | ( | |
| miR-1254 | ↑ | Early diagnostic marker | ( | |
| miR-574-5p | ↑ | |||
| miR-361-3p | ↑ | Indicator for malignant lung tumors vs benign lung tumors | ( | |
| miR-625* | ↑ | |||
| miRNA-10b | ↑ | Indicator for positive lymph node metastasis | ( | |
| miR-486 | ↑ | Predictor for overall survival | ( | |
| miR-30d | ||||
| miR-1 | ||||
| miR-499 | ||||
| miR-197 | ↑ | Diagnosis marker for lung cancer patients vs normal people | ( | |
| miR-182 | ||||
| miR-378a | Exosomes | ↑ | Diagnosis marker for lung adenocarcinoma and carcinomas patients vs healthy former smokers | ( |
| miR-379 | ||||
| miR-139-5p | ||||
| miR-200b-5p | ||||
| miR-151a-5p | ↑ | Diagnosis marker for the lung adenocarcinoma patients vs lung granuloma patients | ( | |
| miR-30a-3p | ||||
| miR-200b-5p | ||||
| miR-629 | ↑ | Early diagnostic marker | ( | |
| miR-100 | ||||
| miR-154-3p | ||||
The isolation and detection of tumor cytosol, body fluid and exosome miRNAs.
| Classification | Tumor cytosol miRNAs | Body fluid miRNAs | Exosome miRNAs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sources | Fresh tumor tissues or FFPE tissues | Whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, CSF, sputum, saliva, or BAL | |
| Special sample process for miRNA isolation | None | Need to avoid protein contamination | Need to isolate exosomes |
| Complexity of isolation | + | ++ | +++ |
| Detection | qRT-PCR, Northern blot, NGS, microarray | ||
| Invasiveness | Yes | None | None |
| Main function | Diagnosis, prognosis and therapy | Early diagnosis and prognosis | Early diagnosis, prognosis and drug transportation |
FFPE, formalin-fixed paraffin embedded; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; NGS, next generation sequence.
Figure 1The connection of tumor tissue miRNA, body fluid miRNA, and exosome miRNA.