| Literature DB >> 25960741 |
Tereza Halkova1, Romana Cuperkova1, Marek Minarik2, Lucie Benesova1.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer is one of the most fatal malignancies with increasing incidence and high mortality. Possibilities for early diagnosis are limited and there is currently no efficient therapy. Molecular markers that have been introduced into diagnosis and treatment of other solid tumors remain unreciprocated in this disease. Recent discoveries have shown that certain microRNAs (miRNAs) take part in fundamental molecular processes associated with pancreatic cancer initiation and progression including cell cycle, DNA repair, apoptosis, invasivity, and metastasis. The mechanism involves both positive and negative regulation of expression of protooncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. Various miRNAs are expressed at different levels among normal pancreatic tissue, chronic pancreatitis, and pancreatic cancer and may therefore serve as a tool to differentiate chronic pancreatitis from early stages of cancer. Other miRNAs can indicate the probable course of the disease or determine the survival prognosis. In addition, there is a growing interest directed at the understanding of miRNA-induced molecular mechanisms. The possibility of intervention in the molecular mechanisms of miRNAs regulation could begin a new generation of pancreatic cancer therapies. This review summarizes the recent reports describing functions of miRNAs in cellular processes underlying pancreatic cancerogenesis and their utility in diagnosis, survival prognosis, and therapy.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25960741 PMCID: PMC4417562 DOI: 10.1155/2015/892903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6121 Impact factor: 2.260
Figure 1Effect of miRNAs expression on the regulation of protooncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes. Some miRNAs act as negative regulators of protooncogenes expression and therefore their role is tumor-suppression (a). In cancerous tissue, reduced levels of these tumor-suppressive miRNAs lead to increased target oncogenes promoting further tumor development (b). Other miRNAs negatively regulate expression of tumor-suppressor genes; hence, their function is (proto) oncogenic (c). In tumor tissue their increased expression results in blockage of translation of tumor-suppressors further assisting the malignant process (d).
miRNAs involved in processes of malignant transformation of pancreatic tissue (↓ = reduced, ↑ = increased).
| miRNA | Role of miRNA | Expression in PC cells | Impact of the aberrant expression on PC cells | Target gene | Respective references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-21 | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↑ proliferation and frequency of cell division |
| [ |
| miR-221 | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↑ cell cycle progression |
| [ |
| miR-192 | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↑ cell cycle progression |
| [ |
| miR-424-5p | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↑ cell proliferation and migration |
| [ |
| miR-124 | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↑ proliferation, invasion, and metastasis |
| [ |
| miR-203 | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↑ cell cycle progression, ↓ apoptosis |
| [ |
| ↑ epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) |
| [ | |||
| miR-143 | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↑ cell proliferation, cellular invasivity, and migration |
| [ |
| miR-126, let-7d | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↑ cell proliferation |
| [ |
| miR-34a | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↓ apoptosis and DNA repair, ↑ cell cycle progression and angiogenesis |
| [ |
| miR-155 | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↓ apoptosis |
| [ |
| miR-200 family | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↑ EMT |
| [ |
| miR-208 | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↑ EMT |
| [ |
| miR-146a | Tumor-suppressive | ↓ | ↑ invasivity |
| [ |
| miR-10a | Oncogenic | ↑ | ↑ invasivity and metastatic behavior |
| [ |
miRNAs whose expression increase (↑) or decrease (↓) with increasing PanIN stages.
| let-7a [ | ↑ | miR-155 [ | ↑ | miR-200a/b/c [ | ↑ |
| miR-10b [ | ↑ | miR-182 [ | ↑ | miR-217 [ | ↓ |
| miR-21 [ | ↑ | miR-183* [ | ↑ | miR-221 [ | ↑ |
| miR-146a [ | ↑ | miR-196a-2 [ | ↑ | miR-222 [ | ↑ |
| miR-148a [ | ↓ | miR-196b [ | ↑ | miR-296-5p [ | ↓ |
*Passenger strand of pre-miRNA.
Prognostic miRNAs expression (↓ reduced, ↑ increased, and ↕ comparable expression).
| miRNA | miRNA level correlated with poor prognosis | Tumor versus normal tissue | Tumor versus CP tissue | CP versus normal tissue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| let-7g* | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-7 | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-10b | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ |
| miR-21 | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | |
| miR-30d | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-31 | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-34a | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-122 | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-124 | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-142-5p | ↑ [ | |||
| miR-145 | ↓ [ | ↑ [ | ||
| miR-146 | ↓ [ | ↑ [ | ||
| miR-148a* | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-155 | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ |
| miR-187 | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-196a | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↕ [ | ↑ [ |
| miR-200c | ↓ [ | |||
| miR-203 | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↕ [ | ↕ [ |
| miR-205 | ↓ [ | ↑ [ | ||
| miR-210 | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | |
| miR-212 | ↑ [ | |||
| miR-218 | ↓ [ | ↓ [ | ||
| miR-219 | ↑ [ | |||
| miR-221 | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | |
| miR-222 |
|
| ||
| miR-675 |
|
*Passenger strand of pre-miRNA.
Types of samples used for miRNA analysis in pancreatic cancer.
| Serum | Fine needle biopsy | Resected tissue | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Invasiveness | Low | Medium | High |
| Possible sampling frequency | Days | Days-weeks | Mostly no or only one sampling |
| The amount of sample/target miRNA | Sufficient/very small | Small/small | Sufficient/sufficient |
| The possibility of obtaining pure tumor tissue (cells) | No | Yes (microdissection) | Yes (macrodissection, microdissection) |
| Respective references | [ | Fixation [ | Frozen tissue [ |
Comparison of principal approaches for study of miRNA [102].
| qRT-PCR | miRNA microarray | |
|---|---|---|
| Principle | PCR amplification | Hybridization |
| The recommended amount of RNA | 10–700 ng | 100–10 000 ng |
| Limit of detection | 10–22 mol | 10–18 mol |
| Data processing | 1 day | More than 2 days |