| Literature DB >> 29100460 |
Kimberly A Birnie1, Cecilia M Prêle1,2, Philip J Thompson1, Bahareh Badrian1, Steven E Mutsaers1,2.
Abstract
Malignant mesothelioma is an aggressive and often fatal cancer associated with asbestos exposure. The disease originates in the mesothelial lining of the serosal cavities, most commonly affecting the pleura. Survival rates are low as diagnosis often occurs at an advanced stage and current treatments are limited. Identifying new diagnostic and therapeutic targets for mesothelioma remains a priority, particularly for the new wave of victims exposed to asbestos through do-it-yourself renovations and in countries where asbestos is still mined and used. Recent advances have demonstrated a biological role for the small but powerful gene regulators microRNA (miRNA) in mesothelioma. A number of potential therapeutic targets have been identified. MiRNA have also become popular as potential biomarkers for mesothelioma due to their stable expression in bodily fluid and tissues. In this review, we highlight the current challenges associated with the diagnosis and treatment of mesothelioma and discuss how targeting miRNA may improve diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; malignant peritoneal mesothelioma; malignant pleural mesothelioma; microRNA; therapies
Year: 2017 PMID: 29100460 PMCID: PMC5652849 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1miRNA biogenesis
MiRNA biogenesis starts in the nucleus where the miRNA gene is transcribed into a primary miRNA transcript (pri-miRNA) and processed by Drosha/DGCR8 into the miRNA precursor (pre-miRNA). The precursor is exported into the cytoplasm by Exportin-5 where it is cleaved by Dicer to become the mature miRNA. This strand forms the miRISC complex with the AGO2, TRBP, PACT and Dicer proteins. The miRISC uses the miRNA as a guide to identify and bind to target mRNA causing the inhibition of target genes by inducing mRNA degradation or inhibiting translation.
MiRNA with biological roles in mesothelioma
| miRNA | Ref | Expression in mesothelioma vs controls | Samples Analysed | MiRNA genomic location | Chromosomal aberration in mesothelioma? | Target gene regulated in mesothelioma | Mesothelioma cell function regulated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29c-5p | [ | Lower | 8 MPM cell lines, LP9 mesothelial cells | 1q32.2 | Yes [ | DNMT1, DNMT3A | Proliferation, migration, invasion, colony formation, methylation |
| 31 | [ | Lower | 8 MPM cell lines, LP9, primary mesothelial culture, Met-5A | 9p21.3 | Yes [ | PPP6C | Proliferation, migration, invasion, colony formation |
| let-7a | [ | N/A | 2 EphrinA1 treated MPM cell lines | 22q13.31 | Yes [ | RAS oncogenes | Proliferation, migration |
| let-7b | [ | N/A | 2 Ursolic Acid treated MPM cell lines | 22q13.31 | Yes [ | Twist | Apoptosis, EMT |
| 16 | [ | Lower | 60 FFPE MPM tissues (46 Ep, 14 Bi), 23 FFPE normal pleura tissues, 6 MPM cell lines, Met-5A | 13q14.2 | Yes [ | CCDN1, BCL-2, PD-L1 | Proliferation, chemoresistance |
| 34 b/c | [ | Lower | 47 MPM tumours (32 Ep, 10 Bi, 4 Sa, 1 lymphohistiocytic), 10 non-neoplastic pleura, 6 MPM cell lines, 2 primary mesothelial cultures | 11q23.1 | Yes [ | BCL-2 | Proliferation, migration, invasion, resistance to radiotherapy |
| 126 | [ | Lower | 29 FFPE MPM tissues, 5 MPM diagnostic biopsies, 14 matched non-neoplastic tissues, 5 pneumothorax benign reactive mesothelial tissues | 9q34.3 | Yes [ | IRS1, PDK, ACL | Mitochondrial metabolism, proliferation, autophagic flux |
| 1 | [ | Lower | 25 MPM tumours, 25 unmatched normal pleura tissue, 7 MPM cell lines | 20q13.33 | Yes [ | PIM1 | Proliferation, apoptosis, migration, invasion |
| 145 | [ | Lower | 71 MPM tumours, 12 mesothelial benign cysts, 50 normal tissues, 3 MPM cell lines, primary mesothelial cell culture | 5q32 | Yes [ | OCT4 | Cell viability, clonogenicity, migration |
| 21-5p | [ | N/A | N/A | 17q23.1 | Yes [ | MSLN | Proliferation |
| 223 | [ | Lower | 8 MPM cell lines (5 human, 3 mouse), primary mesothelial cell cultures, 26 MPM pleural effusions, 10 benign pleural effusions, 17 FFPE MPM tissues, 6 FFPE normal pleura | Xq12 | No | STMN1 | Migration |
| 302b | [ | N/A | 2 EphrinA1 treated MPM cell lines | 4q25 | Yes [ | MCL-1 | Proliferation, apoptosis |
| 193a-3p | [ | Lower | 120 MPM tissues (59 extrapleural pneumonectomy & 61 pleurectomy + decortication), 23 normal pleura, 10 MPM cell lines, Met-5A | 7q11.2 | Yes [ | MCL-1 | Proliferation, apoptosis, necrosis |
| 17-5p | [ | Lower | 60 FFPE MPM tissues, 23 normal pleura, 7 MPM cell lines, Met-5A | 13q31.3 | Yes [ | KCNMA1 | Migration |
| 205 | [ | N/A | 74 MPM tissues (21 Bi, 18 Sa, 35 Ep) | 1q32.3 | Yes [ | ZEB1, ZEB2 | EMT, invasion, migration |
| PMM | |||||||
| 34a | [ | Lower | 45 PMM tissues, 5 PMM cell lines, 7 normal peritoneum | 1p36.22 | Yes [ | c-MET, AKT | Proliferation, apoptosis, invasion |
Ep – epithelioid, Bi – biphasic, Sa – sarcomatoid, N/A – not available, FFPE – formalin fixed paraffin embedded.
Potential diagnostic miRNA for MPM
| miRNA | Ref | Source | Cohort | Number | MPM Histological Subtype | Statistical Measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 200c, 141, 200b, 429 | [ | Tissue | 1 | 15 MPM, 10 lung AD | N/A | AUC > 0.9 for each miRNA |
| 2 | 100 MPM, 32 lung AD | 32 U, 39 Ep, 19 Bi, 10 Sa | ||||
| 200c, 192, 193a-3p | [ | Tissue | 1 | 29 MPM, 140 carcinomas | 22 Ep, 1 Bi, 6 Sa | sensitivity 100%specificity 94% |
| 2 | 48 MPM, 136 carcinomas | 6 U, 29 Ep, 2 Bi, 7 Sa | ||||
| 3 | 14 MPM 49 carcinomas | 8 Ep, 4 Bi, 2 Sa | ||||
| 126, 143, 145, 652 | [ | Tissue | 1 | 5 MPM, 5 matched diagnostic biopsies, 5 matched non-neoplastic pleura | 5 Ep | AUC 0.96 for miRNA combined |
| 2 | 40 MPM, 12 matched diagnostic biopsies, 14 matched non-neoplastic pleura, 5 non-neoplastic reactive mesothelium | 27 Ep, 25 Bi | ||||
| 625-3p | [ | Serum | 1 | 5 MPM, 3 healthy | 3 Ep, 2 Sa | AUC 0.8 |
| 2 | 5 MPM, 14 healthy | 1 U, 9 Ep, 3 Bi, 2 Sa | ||||
| 3 | 30 MPM, 10 asbestosis | 1 U, 29 Ep, | ||||
| Tissue | 4 | 18 MPM, 7 normal pericardium | 15 Ep, 3 Bi | |||
| 103 | [ | Cellular fraction of peripheral blood | 1 | 23 MPM, 17 asbestos exposed, 25 healthy | 3 U, 12 Ep, 7 Bi, 1 Sa | AUC 0.75 - 0.87 |
| 126 | [ | Tissue | 1 | 10 MPM 5 normal mesothelium | 9 Ep, 1 Sa | AUC 0.7 |
| 2 | 27 MPM & adjacent normal tissue | 23 Ep, 3 Bi, 1 Sa | ||||
| Serum | 3 | 44 MPM, 196 asbestos exposed, 50 healthy | 30 Ep, 8 Bi, 6 Sa | sensitivity 60 - 73%, specificity 74% | ||
| 126, 132-3p | [ | Plasma | 1 | 21 MPM, 21 asbestos exposed | 14 Ep, 4 Bi, 3 Sa | AUC ~ 0.8 for each miRNA and combination |
| 2 | 22 MPM, 44 asbestos exposed | 4U, 14 Ep, 2 Bi, 2 Sa | ||||
| 197-3p, 1281, 32-3p | [ | Serum | 1 | 10 MPM, 10 asbestos exposed, 10 healthy | N/A | AUC ~ 0.7 for each miRNA |
| 2 | 20 MPM, 15 asbestos exposed, 14 healthy | N/A | ||||
| 126, 21 | [ | Tissue | 1 | 40 FFPE benign pleura, 51 FFPE MPM | 34 Ep, 10 Bi, 75 Sa | AUC 0.92 for miRNA combination |
| Archived cytology samples | 2 | 24 Reactive mesothelium, 29 MPM | 29 Ep |
U – unknown, Ep – epithelioid, Bi – biphasic, Sa – sarcomatoid, N/A – not available, FFPE – formalin fixed paraffin embedded.
Potential prognostic miRNA for MPM
| miRNA | Ref | Source | Cohort | Number | MPM Histological Subtype | Expression change and survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29c-5p | [ | Tissue | 1 | 37 MPM | 23 Ep, 14 other | Higher expression = longer survival |
| 2 | 92 MPM | 58 Ep, 34 other | ||||
| 17-5p, 30c | [ | Tissue | 1 | 24 MPM | 8 Ep, 8 Bi, 8 Sa | Lower expression = longer survival in sarcomatoid MPM |
| 31 | [ | Tissue | 1 | 25 FFPE MPM | 16 Ep, 4 Bi, 5 Sa | Lower expression = longer survival in sarcomatoid MPM |
| 21-5p, 23a-3p, 30e-5p, 221-3p, 222-3p, 31-5p | [ | Tissue | 1 | 64 EPP MPM | 47 Ep, 17 Bi | Signature is associated with longer survival |
| 2 | 43 PD MPM | 25 Ep, 13 Bi, 5 Sa | ||||
| Let-7c-5p, 151a-5p | [ | Tissue | 1 | 52 FFPE MPM | 43 Ep, 8 Bi, 1 Sa | Lower expression = longer survival |
| 2 | 16 fresh/frozen MPM | 11 Ep, 4 Bi, 1 Sa |
Ep – epithelioid, Bi – biphasic, Sa – sarcomatoid, FFPE – formalin fixed paraffin embedded, EPP – extrapleural pneumonectomy, PD –Pleurectomy with decortication.