| Literature DB >> 26835418 |
Praneeth R Kuninty1, Jonas Schnittert1, Gert Storm2, Jai Prakash1.
Abstract
Communication between stromal cells and tumor cells initiates tumor growth, angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis. Stromal cells include cancer-associated fibroblasts, tumor-associated macrophages, pericytes, endothelial cells, and infiltrating immune cells. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) in the tumor microenvironment have emerged as key players involved in the development of cancer and its progression. miRNAs are small endogenous non-protein-coding RNAs that negatively regulate the expression of multiple target genes at post-transcriptional level and thereby control many cellular processes. In this review, we provide a comprehensive overview of miRNAs dysregulated in different stromal cells and their impact on the regulation of intercellular crosstalk in the tumor microenvironment. We also discuss the therapeutic significance potential of miRNAs to modulate the tumor microenvironment. Since miRNA delivery is quite challenging and the biggest hurdle for clinical translation of miRNA therapeutics, we review various non-viral miRNA delivery systems that can potentially be used for targeting miRNA to stromal cells within the tumor microenvironment.Entities:
Keywords: cancer-associated fibroblasts; gene delivery; microRNA; tumor microenvironment; tumor stroma; tumor-associated macrophages
Year: 2016 PMID: 26835418 PMCID: PMC4717414 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2016.00003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1miRNAs mediating changes in tumor microenvironment components. Up and down regulated miRNAs are enlisted? *Mark denotes that the specific miRNA is expressed differentially in different CAFs.
List of miRNAs in various tumor stromal cells.
| Cell type | miRNA | Cancer type | Target gene | Functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAFs | miR-155/214 ( | Ovarian | CCL5 | Differentiation |
| miR-31 ( | Endometrial | SATB2 | Migration, invasion | |
| miR-148a ( | Endometrial | WNT10B | Migration | |
| miR-15/-16 ( | Prostate | FGF2 | Migration, proliferation | |
| miR-320 ( | Breast | ETS2 | Invasion, angiogenesis, tumor growth | |
| miR-106b ( | Gastric | PTEN | Migration, invasion | |
| miR-200c ( | Breast | Fli-1, TCF12 | Migration, invasion | |
| miR-149 ( | Gastric | IL-6 | Differentiation, anti-stromal effects on tumor cells | |
| miR-21 ( | Colorectal | RECK | Differentiation | |
| Macrophages | miR-155 ( | Hepatocellular carcinoma | C/EBPβ | Repolarization toward M2 phenotype |
| miR-511-3p ( | Macrophages expressing MRC1 | ROCK2 | Tumor growth, blood vessel morphology | |
| miR-26a ( | Hepatocellular carcinoma | M-CSF | Recruitment of macrophages | |
| T cells | miR-34a ( | Hepatocellular carcinoma | CCL22 | Infiltration of immune cells |
| miR-30d ( | Melanoma cells | GALNT7 | Infiltration of Tregs cells | |
| NK cells | miR-150, miR-155 ( | NK cells | SHIP1 | Activation of NK cells |
| Endothelial cells | miR-200b ( | ETS1 | Angiogenesis, migration | |
| miR-29c ( | IGF1 | Angiogenesis, proliferation | ||
| miR-7 ( | Glioblastoma | Cell viability, migration, angiogenesis | ||
| miR-155 ( | Breast | VHL | Invasion, migration, proliferation, angiogenesis | |
| Pericytes | miR-145, miR-126a, miR-199a ( | Fli1 | Migration | |