| Literature DB >> 26146543 |
Lei Zhou1,2, Fan Liu1,3, Xiaomin Wang1, Gaoliang Ouyang4.
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding regulatory RNAs that regulate gene expression post-transcriptionally by either inhibiting protein translation or degrading target mRNAs. The differential expression profiles of miRNAs in different types of cancers and in the multi-step process of tumor progression indicate that miRNAs are involved in tumor onset, growth and progression. Metastasis is the most common cause of cancer-related mortality. Current evidence demonstrates that aberrant miRNA expression promotes or inhibits tumor metastasis by modulating the expression of numerous target genes. Therefore, the identification of metastasis-related miRNAs and a better understanding of the complex functions of miRNAs in tumor metastasis will provide potential diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers, as well as therapeutic targets for clinical application. Here, we review the functions of miRNAs in the control of multiple steps of tumor metastasis.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cancer stem cell; Epithelial-mesenchymal transition; Metastasis; microRNA
Year: 2015 PMID: 26146543 PMCID: PMC4491246 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-015-0028-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 7.133
Fig. 1The roles of microRNAs in the regulation of tumor metastasis. Tumor metastasis is a complex process that is composed of multiple steps. To disseminate to distant sites, tumor cells detach from their primary sites by local migration, invasion and penetration of the stromal cell layers. For blood vessel-borne metastasis, disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) intravasate into blood vessels and survive in the circulation. After they arrive at distant organ sites, DTCs must extravasate from the blood and adapt to the new tissue microenvironments, where only a few DTCs form micrometastases. Finally, only a small subset of micrometastases eventually becomes detectable macrometastases. During this metastatic cascade, miRNAs can regulate the expression of multiple target genes and can modulate multiple tumor cell phenotypes, such as motility, invasion, intravasation, resistance to anoikis, extravasation and metastatic colonization as well as epithelial-mesenchymal transition, cell stemness, dormancy and the tumor microenvironment. miRNAs may act as positive regulators (purple) or negative regulators (blue) in the regulation of tumor metastasis. ECM, extracellular matrix; CSC, cancer stem cell
Functions of microRNAs in tumor metastasis
| microRNA | Function in tumor metastasis | Targets and putative targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-10b | Promotes cell migration, invasion and metastasis | TP53, PAX6, NOTCH1, HOXD10 | [ |
| miR-19a/b | Promotes gastric cancer cell migration, invasion and metastasis | MXD1 | [ |
| miR-135b | Promotes cell migration, invasion and metastasis | LATS2, β-TrCP, NDR2, LZTS1 | [ |
| miR-362-5p | Promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion | CYLD | [ |
| miR-34a | Inhibits cell migration, invasion and lung metastasis of breast cancer cells; suppresses prostate CSCs and metastasis; decreases the production of the chemokine CCL22; disturbs the bone metastatic niche | Fra-1, CD44, CCL22, Tgif2 | [ |
| miR-34c | Inhibits cell migration, invasion and lung metastasis of breast cancer cells | Fra-1 | [ |
| miR-135a | Inhibits prostate cancer cell migration and invasion | ROCK1, ROCK2 | [ |
| miR-137 | Reduces the invasiveness of colorectal cancer cells | FMNL2 | [ |
| miR-145 | Attenuates gastric cancer cell migratory and invasive abilities | N-cadherin, HIF-2α | [ |
| miR-1 | Affects the cellular organization of F-actin and impairs tumor cell invasion and filopodia formation | FN1, LASP1, XPO6 | [ |
| miR-335 | Suppresses cell migration, invasion and metastasis | Tenascin C, SOX4 | [ |
| miR-29c | Inhibits tumor invasion and metastasis | Collagens, Laminin γ1 | [ |
| miR-21 | Promotes epithelial collective cell migration, invasion and lung metastasis; enhances colorectal cancer cell intravasation | TPM1, PDCD4, Maspin, PDCD4 | [ |
| miR-124 | Modulates the intercellular adhesion of leading cells; inhibits EMT | Integrin β1, ROCK2, EZH2 | [ |
| miR-105 | Destroys the integrity of vascular endothelial barriers to promote metastasis | ZO-1 | [ |
| miR-182 | Promotes cancer cell intravasation into the circulation | Mtss1, Pai1, Rsu1, Timp1 | [ |
| miR-520c/373 | Inhibits cell invasion | RELA, TGFBR2 | [ |
| let-7 | Inhibits bone metastasis of breast cancer cells | HMGA2, Snail | [ |
| miR-296-3p | Promotes prostate cancer cell survival | ICAM-1 | [ |
| miR-148b | Inhibits multiple steps of tumor progression via the regulation of invasion, resistance to anoikis, extravasation, lung metastasis colonization and chemotherapeutic response | ITGA5, ROCK1, PIK3CA/p110α, NRAS, CSF1 | [ |
| miR-155 | Negatively regulates the function of the brain endothelial barrier; promotes TGF-β-induced EMT, tight junction dissolution, cell migration and invasion. Suppresses tumor growth via the regulation of the tumor microenvironment | Annexin-2, Claudin-1, DOCK-1, Syntenin-1, c-Maf, Pu.1, Ship1, C/EBPβ, HIF-1α | [ |
| miR-214 | Suppresses cell migration and invasion | FGFR1, TFAP2C | [ |
| miR-31 | Represses local invasion, extravasation and initial survival in distant tissues and distant metastatic colonization | ITGA5, RDX, RhoA | [ |
| miR-25 | Inhibits extravasation of prostate cancer cells | αv- and α6-integrins | [ |
| miR-200s | Inhibits EMT but promotes metastatic colonization | Sec23a, ZEB1, ZEB2 | [ |
| miR-122 | Promotes metastatic colonization of breast cancer cells | PKM2 | [ |
| miR-149 | Inhibits basal-like breast cancer cell migration and invasion | Rap1a, Rap1b | [ |
| miR-493 | Inhibits the settlement of metastasized colon cancer cells in the liver; promotes the death of colon cancer cells | IGF1R | [ |
| miR-148a | Inhibits hepatoma cell migration | Met | [ |
| miR-9 | Promotes breast cancer cell motility and invasiveness; enhances squamous cell carcinoma CSC expansion and metastasis | CDH1, α-catenin | [ |
| miR-20a | Induces EMT and promotes metastasis | Smad7 | [ |
| miR-203 | Suppresses cell invasion and EMT | SNAI2 | [ |
| miR-612 | Inhibits local invasion and distant metastatic colonization | Akt2 | [ |
| miR-125a | Inhibits EMT of ovarian cancer cells | ARID3B | [ |
| miR-424 | Promotes EMT | TGFBR3 | [ |
| miR-22 | Promotes EMT, invasiveness, stemness and metastasis | TET1, TET2, TET3 | [ |
| miR-199a | Endows breast cancer cells with enhanced CSC properties; promotes invasion, angiogenesis and colonization in the case of melanoma | FOXP2, ApoE | [ |
| miR-133a | Promotes invasion of CSCs that express high levels of CD133 | SGMS2, UBA2, SNX30, ANXA2 | [ |
| miR-7 | Suppresses cell invasion and metastasis; inhibits the ability of breast CSCs to metastasize to the brain | SETDB1, KLF4 | [ |
| miR-33b | Inhibits the stemness and lung metastasis of breast cancer cells | HMGA2, SALL4, Twist1 | [ |
| miR-494 | Promotes the accumulation of MDSCs in tumor tissues | PTEN | [ |
| miR-101 | Augments cancer cell stemness and enhances the tumorigenic and metastatic potential of cancer cells; inhibits HCC growth, intrahepatic metastasis and distant metastasis | CtBP2, ROCK2 | [ |
| miR-126 | Inhibits endothelial recruitment, metastatic angiogenesis and metastatic colonization at distant sites | IGFBP2, PITPNC1, MERTK, SDF-1α | [ |
| miR-126* | Suppresses breast cancer metastasis via the inhibition of the recruitment of mesenchymal stem cells and inflammatory monocytes | SDF-1α | [ |
| miR-23b | Promotes breast cancer cell dormancy in a metastatic niche | MARCKS | [ |
| miR-127/197/222/223 | Promotes breast cancer cell quiescence | CXCL12 | [ |
| miR-103/107 | Promotes local invasion and liver metastasis | DAPK, KLF4 | [ |