| Literature DB >> 29723992 |
Tomomi Fujii1, Keiji Shimada2, Tokiko Nakai3, Chiho Ohbayashi4.
Abstract
Long-term heavy cigarette smoking is a well-known high-risk factor for carcinogenesis in various organs such as the head and neck, lungs, and urinary bladder. Furthermore, cigarette smoking can systemically accelerate aging, and as the result, promoting carcinogenesis via changing the host microenvironment. Various inflammatory factors, hormones, and chemical mediators induced by smoking mediate carcinoma-related molecules and induce carcinogenesis. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a family of short noncoding RNA molecules that bind to mRNAs and inhibit their expression. Cigarette smoke induces the expression of various miRNAs, many of which are known to function in the post-transcriptional silencing of anticancer molecules, thereby leading to smoking-induced carcinogenesis. Analysis of expression profiles of smoking-induced miRNAs can help identify biomarkers for the diagnosis and prognosis of smoking-related cancers and prediction of therapeutic responses, as well as revealing promising therapeutic targets. Here, we introduce the most recent and useful findings of miRNA analyses focused on lung cancer and urinary bladder cancer, which are strongly associated with cigarette smoking, and discuss the utility of miRNAs as clinical biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: bladder carcinoma; carcinogenesis; lung carcinoma; microRNA; smoking
Year: 2018 PMID: 29723992 PMCID: PMC5977137 DOI: 10.3390/jcm7050098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Relationship between the microRNA (miRNA) and mRNA of target molecules.
| miRNA | Target Molecules | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-99a-5p | mTOR | Decreased phosphorylation of mTOR and AKT | [ |
| miR-29a | DNMT3A, DNMT3B, MAT2A, SMS | Involvement in the cysteine and methionine metabolism | [ |
| miR-210 | HIF-1α | Promoting upper tract urothelial carcinoma carcinogenesis | [ |
| miR-429 | CDKN2B | Promoted cell growth and decreased apoptosis | [ |
| miR-30a-5p | claudin-5 | Suppressed cell proliferation, migration and EMT | [ |
| miR-32-5p, -224-5p, -412-3p, -203a-3p, -205-5p | Cancer specific survival, tumor progression, EMT | [ | |
| miR-21-5p | Novel biomarker of urothelial carcinoma in urine | [ | |
| miR-193b | ETS1, Cyclin D1 | Inhibited cell migration activity, arrested cell at G1 phase; sensitized CDDP treatment | [ |
| miR-3713 | MMP9 | Control of cell invasiveness | [ |
| miR-451 | c-Myc | Suppressed cell migration and invasion | [ |
| miR-497 | E2F3 | Inhibited cell proliferation, migration and invasion | [ |
| miR-877-3p | p16 | Increased the expression of p16, inhibited cell proliferation and tumorigenicity | [ |
| miR-130b | NF-κB | Persistent activation of NF-κB; promote the malignant progression of urothelial carcinoma | [ |
| miR-133b | Novel biomarker of urothelial carcinoma in the tissue | [ | |
| miR-146a-5p | Novel biomarker of urothelial carcinoma in urine | [ | |
| miR-429 | E-cadherin | Decreased cell migration and invasion through reducing ZEB1 and β-catenin | [ |
| miR-30a | Notch1 | Decreased cell proliferation and migration, activated cell cycle arrest | [ |
| miR-145 | syndecan-1 | Suppressed cell proliferation, induced cell senescence, differentiation | [ |
| miR-24 | CARMA3 | Inhibited cell proliferation, invasion and EMT | [ |
| miR-148a | DNMT1 | Reduced cell viability through apoptosis | [ |
| miR-182 | Novel biomarker of urothelial carcinoma in urine | [ | |
| miR-9 | CBX7 | Decreased cell invasion ability | [ |
| miR-34a | S100P | Decreased cell invasion ability | [ |
| miR-100 | BAZ2A, mTOR, SMARCA5 | Increased cell proliferation, anti-apoptosis | [ |
| miR-99a, -100 | FGFR3, FOXA1 | Associated with regional hypomethylation | [ |
| miR-1 | UCA1 | Decreased cell proliferation and motility, induced apoptosis | [ |
| miR-29c | BCL-2, MCL-1 | Induced apoptosis | [ |
| miR-101 | Novel biomarker of urothelial carcinoma in the tissue | [ | |
| miR-126 | ADAM9 | Decreased cell invasion | [ |
| miR27a | AGGF1 | Regulation of hypoxia-induced apoptosis | [ |
| miR-320a | ITGB3. | Decreased cell invasion ability | [ |
| miR-23b | Zeb1 | Inhibited cell proliferation, induced G0/G1 cell cycle arreset | [ |
| miR-96 | FOXO1 | Tumorigenesis, control cell apoptosis | [ |
| miR-34a | Notch1 | Decreased cell invasion and migration | [ |
| miR-143 | cyclooxygenase-2 | Decreased cell proliferation and motility | [ |
| miR-125b | E2F3 | Regulate G1/S transition through the E2F3-cyclin A2 signaling pathway | [ |
| miR-101 | EZH2 | Inhibited cell proliferation and colony formation | [ |
Figure 1miR-145 regulates cell proliferation, differentiation, and senescence by regulating syndecan-1 in urothelial carcinoma cells. miR-145 and syndecan-1, a putative direct target of miR-145, control the expression of cell differentiation markers [70].
Figure 2Life time from stem cells to aging and/or carcinogenesis. Genetic changes such as mutations induce carcinogenesis by suppressing the production of anticancer molecules via activating oncogenic miRNAs.