| Literature DB >> 26425114 |
Ani V Das1, Radhakrishna M Pillai1.
Abstract
Tumorigenesis is a multistep process, de-regulated due to the imbalance of oncogenes as well as anti-oncogenes, resulting in disruption of tissue homeostasis. In many cases the effect of oncogenes and anti-oncogenes are mediated by various other molecules such as microRNAs. microRNAs are small non-coding RNAs established to post-transcriptionally regulate more than half of the protein coding genes. miR cluster 143/145 is one such cancer-related microRNA cluster which is down-regulated in most of the cancers and is able to hinder tumorigenesis by targeting tumor-associated genes. The fact that they could sensitize drug-resistant cancer cells by targeting multidrug resistant genes makes them potent tools to target cancer cells. Their low levels precede events which lead to cancer progression and therefore could be considered also as biomarkers to stage the disease. Interestingly, evidence suggests the existence of several in vivo mechanisms by which this cluster is differentially regulated at the molecular level to keep their levels low in cancer. In this review, we summarize the roles of miR cluster 143/145 in cancer, their potential prognostic applications and also their regulation during tumorigenesis.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-oncomiR; MicroRNAs; Multidrug resistance; Tumorigenesis; miR cluster 143/145
Year: 2015 PMID: 26425114 PMCID: PMC4588501 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-015-0247-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Fig. 1miR cluster 143/145 is evolutionarily conserved across species. a Schematic of chromosomal location of miR cluster 143/145 (adapted from UCSC genome browser. b Schematic representation of structures of miR cluster 143/145 primary transcripts and their location. Multi-species alignment of sequences of miR-143 (c) and miR-145 (d) (courtesy to Clustal W Omega)
Validated targets for miR cluster 143/145 with their cancer-related function
| Target genes | Type of cancer | Cancer-related function | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| KRAS | CRC, PCa, PaCa | Proliferation | [ |
| MACC1 | CRC | Metastasis | [ |
| TLR2 | CRC | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| DNMT3A | CRC, BrCa, leukemia | Proliferation | [ |
| Akt | CRC, BC, HCC, glioma | Apoptosis, proliferation | [ |
| ERK5 | CRC, PCa, BC, B-cell malignancy | Proliferation | [ |
| Bcl2 | CRC, BrCa, OC, BC | Apoptosis | [ |
| Survivin | BrCa | Apoptosis | [ |
| ARHGEF1 | PaCa | Metastasis | [ |
| ARHGEF2 | PaCa | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| FNDC3B | HCC | Metastasis | [ |
| Cox2 | BC, GC | Metastasis | [ |
| MMP-13 | OC, lung | Invasion | [ |
| Lmk1 | Lung | Metastasis | [ |
|
| |||
| Cateninδ-1 | CRC | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| DFF45 | CRC | Apoptosis | [ |
| VEGF | CRC, BrCa, OC, thyroid, GB | Angiogenesis | [ |
| c-Myc | CRC, PCa, EOC, BrCa, PaCa, ESCC, lung, glioma, RCC | Proliferation, invasion, apoptosis | [ |
| PAK4 | CRC | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| IRS1 | CRC, HCC, BC | Proliferation | [ |
| IRS2 | CRC | Proliferation | [ |
| YES | CRC | Proliferation | [ |
| STAT1 | CRC | Proliferation | [ |
| Fascin-1 | CRC, BrCa, BC, ESCC, glioma | Invasion | [ |
| SWAP70 | PCa | Invasion | [ |
| ERG | PCa | Proliferation, invasion, apoptosis, angiogenesis | [ |
| CD44 | PCa, lung | CSC | [ |
| Oct4 | PCa, lung, GCT | CSC | [ |
| KLF4 | PCa, GCT | CSC | [ |
| CDK4 | Lung | Proliferation | [ |
| CDK6 | EOC, OSCC | Proliferation | [ |
| p70S6K1 | CRC, EOC | Proliferation | [ |
| Muc-1 | EOC, BrCa | Invasion | [ |
| RTKN | BrCa | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| JAM-A | BrCa | Proliferation | [ |
| ERα | BrCa | Proliferation | [ |
| RREB1 | PaCa | Proliferation, apoptosis | [ |
| HDAC2 | HCC | Transcriptional regulation | [ |
| Ets1 | GC | Migration, apoptosis, angiogenesis | [ |
| N-cadherin | GC | Invasion | [ |
| E-cadherin | Thyroid | Invasion | [ |
| EGFR | Lung, glioma | Proliferation | [ |
| NUDT1 | BC, lung | Proliferation | [ |
| ROCK1 | OC, glioma | Proliferation, migration | [ |
| FLT1 | OC | Proliferation | [ |
| PAK1 | BC | Proliferation, metastasis | [ |
| CBFβ | BC | Apoptosis | [ |
| PPP3CA | BC | Apoptosis | [ |
| CLINT1 | BC | Apoptosis | [ |
| SOCS7 | BC | Apoptosis | [ |
| Ilk | BC | Cell division/proliferation | [ |
| ANGPT2 | RCC | Angiogenesis | [ |
| NEDD9 | Glioma, RCC | Proliferation, metastasis | [ |
| MMP-11 | RCC | Metastasis | [ |
| CTGF | Glioma | Proliferation, invasion, metastasis, angiogenesis | [ |
| ADAM17 | Glioma, RCC, HNSCC | Proliferation, invasion, metastasis, angiogenesis | [ |
| ADAM22 | Glioma | Metastasis, drug resistance | [ |
| Abcg2 | Glioma | Drug resistance, CSC | [ |
| ADD3 | Glioma | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| Sox9 | Glioma, HNSCC | Proliferation, CSC | [ |
| Sox2 | Glioma, GCT | Proliferation, CSC | [ |
| Nanog | Glioblastoma | CSC | [ |
| PLAUR | Glioblastoma | Metastasis | [ |
| SPOCK3 | Glioma | Invasion | [ |
| SLC7A5 | Glioma | Proliferation, metastasis | [ |
| AKT3 | Thyroid | Metastasis | [205] |
|
| |||
| KLF5 | CRC | Proliferation | [ |
| Myo6 | PCa | Migration, apoptosis | [ |
| GOLM1 | PCa | Metastasis | [ |
| CD133 | PCa | CSC | [ |
| IGFIR | CRC, HCC, BC | Proliferation | [ |
| MDM2 | BrCa, HNSCC | Apoptosis | [ |
| PAI-1 | BC | Migration, metastasis | [ |
| HK2 | BrCa, HNSCC, OC, RCC, glioma | Tumor initiation and maintenance | [ |
| N-ras | BrCa, glioma | Cell division, proliferation, apoptosis | [ |
| ERBB3 | BrCa | Drug resistance | [ |
CRC colorectal cancer, PCa prostate cancer, PaCa pancreatic cancer, BrCa breast cancer, GC gastric cancer, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, OC osteosarcoma, RCC renal cell carcinoma, BC bladder cancer, HNSCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, GCT germ cell tumor, OSCC oral squamous cell carcinoma, GB gall bladder, EOC epithelial ovarian cancer, ESCC esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
List of molecules that regulate miR cluster 143/145 in cancer
| Regulatory molecules | Cancer type | Expression of these regulators in cancer | miRNA | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| FoxO | RCC | Low | miR-145 | [ |
| p53 | CRC, BrCa, PCa, HNSCC, Cervical | Low | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| TGF-β1 | GC | High | miR-143 | [ |
| BRCA1 | BrCa | Low | miR-145 | [ |
| C/EBPβ | BrCa | Low | miR-143 | [ |
| PPARγ | CRC | Low | miR-145 | [ |
|
| ||||
| HPV-E6 | HPV-induced cervical | High | miR-145 | [ |
| RREB1 | CRC | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| KRAS | CRC, PaCa | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| EGFR | CRC | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| ERα | GC | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| 17-β-estradiol | BrCa | High | miR-143 | [ |
| Estrogen | BrCa | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| FSH | EOC, cervical | High | miR-143 | [ |
| Adam17 | RCC | High | miR-145 | [ |
| Sox2 | Glioma, GCTs | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
| Limk1 | NSCLC | High | miR-143 | [ |
| DDX6 | GC | High | miR-143, miR-145 | [ |
CRC colorectal cancer, PCa prostate cancer, PaCa pancreatic cancer, BrCa breast cancer, GC gastric cancer, RCC renal cell carcinoma, HNSCC head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, EOC epithelial ovarian cancer, GCT germ cell tumor, NSCLC non-small cell lung carcinoma
Fig. 2Schematic representing the involvement of miR cluster 143/145 in tumorigenesis. a Represents that some oncogenic signals can reduce the transcription of miR cluster 143/145 which in turn increase the tumorigenic events resulting in cancer. b On the other hand, anti-oncogenic signals can up-regulate this cluster which eventually can reduce tumorigenesis