| Literature DB >> 29701682 |
Sophie L Mumford1, Benjamin P Towler2, Amy L Pashler3, Onur Gilleard4, Yella Martin5, Sarah F Newbury6.
Abstract
Effective management of melanoma depends heavily on early diagnosis. When detected in early non-metastatic stages, melanoma is almost 100% curable by surgical resection, however when detected in late metastatic stages III and IV, 5-year survival rates drop to ~50% and 10⁻25%, respectively, due to limited efficacy of current treatment options. This presents a pressing need to identify biomarkers that can detect patients at high risk of recurrence and progression to metastatic disease, which will allow for early intervention and survival benefit. Accumulating evidence over the past few decades has highlighted the potential use of circulating molecular biomarkers for melanoma diagnosis and prognosis, including lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), S100 calcium-binding protein B (S100B) and circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) fragments. Since 2010, circulating microRNAs (miRNAs) have been increasingly recognised as more robust non-invasive biomarkers for melanoma due to their structural stability under the harsh conditions of the blood and different conditions of sample processing and isolation. Several pre-analytical and analytical variables challenge the accurate quantification of relative miRNA levels between serum samples or plasma samples, leading to conflicting findings between studies on circulating miRNA biomarkers for melanoma. In this review, we provide a critical summary of the circulating miRNA biomarkers for melanoma published to date.Entities:
Keywords: circulating biomarkers; diagnostic biomarkers; exosomes; melanoma; microRNAs; prognostic biomarkers
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29701682 PMCID: PMC6022922 DOI: 10.3390/biom8020021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1MicroRNA (miRNA) biogenesis and function. Precursor molecules termed primary miRNAs (pri-miRNAs) are transcribed from their cognate genes in the nucleus. Pri-miRNAs are cleaved by Drosha and DGCR8, to generate a 60–70 nucleotide precursor miRNAs (pre-miRNAs). Pre-miRNAs are transported to the cytoplasm by Exportin-5 in a Ran-GTP dependent manner, where it they are cleaved by Dicer generating a small miRNA duplex. TAR-RNA-binding protein TRBP interacts with Dicer and the bound double strand RNA (dsRNA) duplex, and recruits AGO2 to nucleate RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). The guide strand is incorporated into RISC, while the complementary strand is excluded. The mature miRNA then guides RISC-induced messenger RNA (mRNA) down-regulation through translational repression or mRNA cleavage depending on the level of sequence complementarity between the miRNA and target mRNA.
Potential diagnostic circulating miRNA biomarkers for melanoma. This table summarizes the miRNAs found to be differentially expressed in the circulation of melanoma patients relative to healthy controls (Stage 0), highlighting the technical variables that may lead to the lack of consistency between studies. Pastel blue rows refer to discovery/training patient cohorts. Pastel orange rows refer to independent validation patient cohorts. MicroRNAs showing the same direction of change between multiple studies and/or have been verified using both a discovery and validation cohort are shown in green and those that additionally have used an acceptable normalization method and have been verified using an independent validation cohort are shown in green and are underlined. MicroRNAs showing a different direction of change between studies are shown in red. Exogenous spike-in controls are shown in blue. Further details are given in Table S1.
| Ref | miRNA | miRNA | Sample Type | Sample Distribution | Normalization Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 30 miRNAs | 21 miRNAs | Blood cells | Stages I/II (1), II (7), III (4), IV (8); unknown stage (4); healthy (20) | small nucleolar RNA 48 (RNU48) |
| 16 miRNA signature including: miR-186, let-7d, miR-18a, miR-145, miR-99a. | 16 miRNA signature including: miR-17 | Blood cells | Stages II (1), III (2), IV (7), V (1); healthy (20) | small nucleolar RNA 48 (RNU48) | |
| [ | MEL38: 19 miRNAs (including | MEL38: 19 miRNAs (including | Plasma | Stages I (4), II (18), III (4) and IV (4) | |
| [ | 13 miRNA (including | 40 miRNA | Serum | Stages 0 (4), I (11), II (17), III (11), IV (9); healthy (30) | |
| miR-193b-3p, miR-720, | miR-204- 5p, miR-182-5p, | Serum | Stages 0 (4), I (11), II (17), III (11), IV (9); healthy (30) | ||
| [ | miR-193a-3p and miR-524-5p | Plasma | Stage I–II (10), III (10), IV (10); healthy (32) | Global mean normalization and NormFinder | |
| [ | 12 dysregulated | 12 dysregulated | Serum | Stage IV males (7); healthy males (4) | NormFinder & geNorm (miR-320a) |
| not applicable | miR-29c-5p and | Serum | Stage IV males and females (28); healthy males and females (10) | NormFinder & geNorm (miR-320a) | |
| [ | miR-4487, miR-4706, miR-4731, miR-509-3p, miR-509-5p | Serum | Stages I/II (86), III (50), IV (119); healthy (102), healthy high nevus count (12), 16 history of melanoma | ||
| [ | not applicable |
| Serum and exosomes | Advanced melanoma (21: 71% with metastases), 16 disease-free, 19 healthy | miR-16; |
| [ | miR-20a, a miR of the 17–92 complex, and | not applicable | Plasma | Uveal melanoma (6), healthy donors (26), donors (26) |
|
Potential prognostic circulating miRNA biomarkers for melanoma. This table summarizes the miRNAs found to be differentially expressed in the circulation of metastatic melanoma patients compared to non-metastatic melanoma patients, and/or those whose up- or down-regulation correlates with poor prognosis, highlighting the technical variables that may lead to the lack of consistency between studies. Pastel blue rows refer to discovery/training patient cohorts. Pastel orange rows refer to independent validation patient cohorts. Stage 0 = Healthy controls. MiRNAs showing the same direction of change between multiple studies and/or have been verified using both a discovery and validation cohort are shown in green and those that additionally have used an acceptable normalization method and have been verified using an independent validation cohort are shown in green and are underlined. MiRNAs showing a different direction of change between studies are shown in red. Exogenous spike-in controls are shown in blue. Further details are given in Table S2.
| Ref. | miRNA | miRNA | Sample Type | Sample | Normalization Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | MEL18 | MEL18 | Plasma | Stages I (4), II (18), III (4) and IV (4) | |
| [ | 13 miRNA (inc | 40 miRNA | Serum | Serum, serum pools, melanoma and normal tissue, cell lines, whole blood | |
| - | Serum | Stages 0 (4), I (11), II (17), III (11), IV (9); healthy (30) | cel-miR-39, cel-miR-54, cel-miR-238; Global mean normalization and RefFinder (5 miRNAs) | ||
| [ | Serum | Stages I (34), II (13), III (8); recurred stages I (5), II (7), III (13) | Median normalization | ||
| Serum | Stage I (10), II (16), III (4); recurred stages I (0), stage II (12), III (8) | Median normalization | |||
| [ | - | miR-200c-3p | Plasma | Stage I–II (10), III (10), IV (10); healthy (32) | Global mean normalization and NormFinder |
| [ | miR-30d | Serum | 201 stages I, II and III recurred and non-recurred | miR-30c and miR-181a | |
| miR-30d | Serum | 82 stages I, II and III recurred and non-recurred | miR-30c and miR-181a | ||
| [ | - |
| Serum | Stages I (30), II (30), III (30) and IV (30); cancer-free (120) |
|
| [ | - |
| Serum | Stages I/II (20), III/IV (40) | RNA U6 |
| [ | miR-21 | - | Plasma | Stages 0–II (12), III (10), IV (4); 3-year recurrence-free-survival (4), preoperative postoperative; benign (2) & dysplastic nevus (4) | Not specified |
| [ |
| - | Serum | Stages I, II, III and IV (90), healthy controls (not specified) |
|
| [ |
| - | Serum | Stages I/II (27), III/IV (45); healthy (54) | miR-16, |
| [ |
| - | Plasma | Stages III (20), IV (26); healthy (6) | Standard curves generated by using five serially diluted melanoma cell RNA |
|
| - | Plasma | Stages III (60), IV (70) disease-free; stage III (46 recurred <2 years/42 recurred >5 years); healthy (35) | Standard curves generated by using five serially diluted melanoma cell RNA |
Figure 2Evaluation of the miRNeasy (Qiagen) and miRCURY (Exiqon) extraction kits. (A) Eight healthy blood donors were used. RNA was extracted from 200 µL serum using the miRNeasy RNA isolation kit (Qiagen) and miRCURY RNA isolation kit Biofuids (Exiqon) following the manufacturer’s instructions, and eluted in 14 µL and 50 µL of RNase free water respectively. TaqMan microRNA quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) (Applied Biosystems, Waltham, MA, USA) was carried out against miR-423-3p, a normalizer recommended by Exiqon. Cq values for miR-423-3p obtained from RNA extracted using the miRNeasy RNA isolation kit (Red) verses Cq values obtained from RNA extracted using the miRCURY RNA isolation kit Biofluids (Green) are displayed. (B) Eighteen healthy blood donors were used. RNA was extracted from 200 µL serum using the miRCURY RNA isolation kit Biofluids (Exiqon). TaqMan microRNA qRT-PCR and miRCURY™ LNA™ Universal RT microRNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Exiqon) was carried out against miR-423-3p. Cq values for miR-423-3p obtained using the TaqMan chemistry are displayed in blue and the Cq values for miR-423-3p obtained using the SYBR-Green based (Exiqon) chemistry are displayed in yellow (see also Supplementary data). *** p < 0.001.