| Literature DB >> 29383201 |
Weiyang Lou1, Jingxing Liu2, Yanjia Gao3, Guansheng Zhong1, Danni Chen1, Jiaying Shen1, Chang Bao1, Liang Xu4, Jie Pan1, Junchi Cheng5, Bisha Ding1, Weimin Fan1,6.
Abstract
Cancer metastasis is a malignant process by which tumor cells migrate from their primary site of origin to other organs. It is the main cause of poor prognosis in cancer patients. Angiogenesis is the process of generating new blood capillaries from pre-existing vasculature. It plays a vital role in primary tumor growth and distant metastasis. MicroRNAs are small non-coding RNAs involved in regulating normal physiological processes as well as cancer pathogenesis. They suppress gene expression by specifically binding to the 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR) of their target genes. They can thus act as oncogenes or tumor suppressors depending on the function of their target genes. MicroRNAs have shown great promise for use in anti-metastatic cancer therapy. In this article, we review the roles of various miRNAs in cancer angiogenesis and metastasis and highlight their potential for use in future therapies against metastatic cancer.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cancer; metastasis; microRNAs; therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 29383201 PMCID: PMC5777813 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.23115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Biogenesis of miRNA. MiRNA is first transcribed by RNA Pol II. Then, the pri-miRNA is processed by the enzyme Drosha and Dicer. The mature miRNA is integrated into RISC, thereby leading to mRNA degradation, translational repression or translational activation.
Figure 2The process of cancer angiogenesis. This process is usually activated in a low oxygen microenvironment. Cancer angiogenesis involves multiple steps, including degradation of vascular basement membrane and extracellular matrix, proliferation and migration of vascular endothelial cells, formation of a new vessel lumen and vessel branches, and maturation of the new vessels.
Figure 3The process of cancer metastasis. A series of sequential steps are involved in cancer metastasis, such as alteration and rearrangement of cytoskeleton, degradation of extracellular matrix, local invasion, intravasation, transfer and survive in the circulatory system, extravasation, settlement and proliferation in a new organ (like lung and liver).
Summary of dysregulated miRNAs in cancer angiogenesis and metastasis
| Name | Expression | Tumor | Angiogenesis | Metastasis | Target gene | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-29c | Down | Glioma | Suppression | Suppression | VEGF, MMP2 | 57 |
| miR-195 | Down | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | VEGF, VAV2, CDC42 | 58 |
| miR-199a-3p | Down | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | VEGFA, VEGFR1, VEGFR2, HGF, MMP2 | 59 |
| miR-497 | Down | Hepatocellular carcinoma, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer | Suppression | Suppression | VEGFA, AEG-1, VEGFR2 | 60, 61, 62 |
| miR-519c | Down | Lung adenocarcinoma, breast cancer | Suppression | Suppression | HIF-1alpha | 63 |
| miR-145 | Down | Gastric cancer, neuroblastoma | Suppression | Suppression | HIF-2alpha, Ets1 | 64, 65 |
| miR-107 | Down | Colon cancer | Suppression | Suppression | HIF-1beta, VEGF, BDNF | 67 |
| miR-542-3p | Down | Breast cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | ANG2 | 71, 72 |
| miR-543 | Down | Osteosarcoma, colorectal cancer | Suppression | Suppression | ANG2, KRAS, MTA1, HMGA2 | 73, 74 |
| miR-9 | Down | Neuroblastoma | Suppression | Suppression | MMP14 | 75 |
| miR-181-5p | Down | Breast cancer, colon cancer | Suppression | Suppression | MMP14 | 76 |
| miR-454 | Down | Pancreatic cancer | Suppression | Suppression | LRP6 | 79 |
| miR-126-3p | Down | Oral squamous cell carcinoma, hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | VEGFA, LRP6, PIK3R2 | 80, 81 |
| miR-26a | Down | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | IL-6, HGF | 83, 84 |
| miR-451 | Down | Osteosarcoma, hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | IL-6R | 85, 86 |
| miR-34a | Down | Bladder cancer | Suppression | Suppression | CD44 | 88 |
| miR-101 | Down | Glioblastoma, nasopharygeal carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | EZH2, ITGA3 | 89, 90 |
| miR-124 | Down | Bladder cancer, cervical cancer | Suppression | Suppression | UHRF1, AmotL1 | 91, 92 |
| miR-135a | Down | Gastric cancer, non-small cell lung cancer | Suppression | Suppression | FAK, IGF-1 | 95, 96 |
| miR-218 | Down | Gastric cancer | Suppression | Suppression | ROBO1 | 99, 100 |
| miR-320 | Down | Oral squamous cell carcinoma, cholangiocarcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | Neuropilin 1 | 104, 105 |
| miR-409-3p | Down | Fibrosarcoma | Suppression | Suppression | Angiogenin | 108 |
| miR-590-5p | Down | Colorectal cancer | Suppression | Suppression | NF90 | 112 |
| miR-1301 | Down | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppression | Suppression | BCL9 | 114 |
| miR-93 | Up | Breast cancer | Promotion | Promotion | Integrin-beta8, LATS2 | 120, 121 |
| miR-378 | Up | Non-small cell lung cancer | Promotion | Promotion | Sufu, Fus-1, HMOX1 | 125, 126 |
| miR-155 | Up | Breast cancer | Promotion | Promotion | VHL, C/EBPbeta | 129, 131 |
| miR-494 | Up | Lung cancer | Promotion | Promotion | NOTCH1, PTEN | 135, 136 |
| miR-296 | Up | Prostate cancer | Promotion | Promotion | HGS, ICAM1 | 139, 142 |
| miR-1246 | Up | Colorectal cancer | Promotion | Promotion | PML, CCNG2 | 145, 146 |
| miR-181a | Up | Chondrosarcoma | Promotion | Promotion | RGS16 | 152 |
| miR-221/222 | Up | Thyroid carcinoma, glioma | Promotion | Promotion | ADIPOR1, TIMP2 | 153, 156 |