Literature DB >> 26508022

Novel MicroRNA signatures in HPV-mediated cervical carcinogenesis in Indian women.

Shweta Sharma1,2, Showket Hussain3, Kartik Soni4, Pallavi Singhal1, Richa Tripathi1, V G Ramachandran2, Sonal Sharma5, Shukla Das2, Beena Pillai4, Mausumi Bharadwaj6.   

Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the role of miRNAs in HPV-mediated cervical pre-cancer and cancer cases in Indian population. We analysed the HPV infection and its genotypes in uterine cervical pre-cancer (n = 80), cancer (n = 200) and normal cervical samples (n = 150) by consensus sequence PCR followed by type specific PCRs. Also, microRNA profiling was done in a subset of cervical pre-cancer (n = 20), cancer cases (n = 50) and normal samples (n = 30) by real-time quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR). The prevalence of HPV infection in pre-cancer was found to be 81 % (65/80) and 94 % (188/200) in cancer cases, with most predominant high-risk HPV type-16 (HR-HPV-16) in 83 % of cancer and 91 % of pre- cancer cases, respectively. Whereas in controls, the HPV infection was found to be very low (5 %). The miRNA profiling revealed that in cervical pre-cancer, 100 miRNAs were significantly (p < 0.001) differentially expressed with 70 miRNAs upregulated and 30 miRNAs downregulated. In cervical cancer cases, 383 miRNA were found to be differentially expressed (p < 0.001), of which 350 miRNAs were upregulated and 33 miRNAs were downregulated. We also observed that 182 miRNAs were differentially expressed (p < 0.001) in HPV-16/18-positive (SiHa/HeLa) cell lines compared with HPV-negative (C33A) cell line. In addition, we identified the novel microRNAs such as miR-892b, miR-500, miR-888, miR-505 and miR-711 in cervical precancerous lesions and cervical cancer cases in Indian population. Taken together, the study demonstrates a crucial role of microRNAs in cervical cancer, which may serve as potential early diagnostic markers for cervical carcinogenesis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cervical cancer; HPV; MicroRNAs

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26508022     DOI: 10.1007/s13277-015-4248-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tumour Biol        ISSN: 1010-4283


  61 in total

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7.  MiR-200b/200c/429 subfamily negatively regulates Rho/ROCK signaling pathway to suppress hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis.

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2.  Mir505-3p regulates axonal development via inhibiting the autophagy pathway by targeting Atg12.

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4.  Suppression of miR-93-5p inhibits high-risk HPV-positive cervical cancer progression via targeting of BTG3.

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5.  Evaluation of miR-711 as Novel Biomarker in Prostate Cancer Progression

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Review 7.  The Role of microRNAs, Long Non-coding RNAs, and Circular RNAs in Cervical Cancer.

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  7 in total

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