| Literature DB >> 30733644 |
Yihang Qi1, Xiangyu Wang1,2, Xiangyi Kong1, Jie Zhai1, Yi Fang1, Xiaoxiang Guan3, Jing Wang1.
Abstract
Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is an infrequent but aggressive manifestation of breast cancer, which accounts for 2-4% of all breast cancer cases but responsible for 7-10% of breast cancer-related deaths, and with a 20-30% 10-year overall survival compared with 80% for patients with non-IBC with an unordinary phenotype, whose molecular mechanisms are still largely unknown to date. Discovering and identifying novel bio-markers responsible for diagnosis and therapeutic targets is a pressing need. MicroRNAs are a class of small non-coding RNAs that are capable to post-transcriptionally regulate gene expression of genes by targeting mRNAs, exerting vital and tremendous affects in numerous malignancy-related biological processes, including cell apoptosis, metabolism, proliferation and differentiation. In this study, we review present and high-quality evidences regarding the potential applications of inflammatory breast cancer associated microRNAs for diagnosis and prognosis of this lethal disease.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Expression; Inflammatory breast cancer; Prognosis; miRNA/microRNA
Year: 2019 PMID: 30733644 PMCID: PMC6357482 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-018-0709-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Compendium of miRNAs with potential as bio-markers for inflammatory breast cancer
| miRNAs | Breast cancer type | Sample | Roles | Expression | Expression signatures and clinical correlations | Predicted targeted genes | Pathways | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-301b | IBC/non-IBC | Primary tissue | Diagnosis | Up-regulated | Highly over-expressed in IBC samples, high expression was associated with higher grade in IBC, and higher grade, ER negativity and stage III in non-IBC | FOXF2, BBC3, PTEN, COL2A1 | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
| miR-451 | IBC | Serum | Diagnosis | Down-regulated | The most down-regulated miRNAs in IBC, able to enhance tamoxifen sensitive | MIF, YWHAZ | Proliferation, colony formation, invasion | [ |
| miR-15a | IBC | Serum | Diagnosis | Down-regulated | Lower in HER2+ IBC patients | CCNE1, CDCA4, BCL2L2, YAP1, AKT-3, SNCG | Proliferation, invasion, apoptosis | [ |
| miR-342-3p | IBC | Plasma | Diagnosis | Down-regulated | Lower in pre-menopausal IBC patients, associated with ER levels | ID4 | Apoptosis | [ |
| miR-342-5p | IBC/non-IBC | Serum | Diagnosis | Down-regulated | Lower in post-menopausal IBC patients, associated with ER levels | ID4 | Apoptosis | [ |
| miR-24 | IBC/non-IBC | Plasma | Diagnosis | Up-regulated | Significantly higher in post-menopausal IBC/non-IBC patients | CDKN1B | Proliferation, apoptosis | [ |
| miR-19a | IBC | Serum | Prognosis | Up-regulated | High levels of serum miR-19a is a predictive bio-marker for favorable clinical outcome in patients with metastatic HER2+ IBC | Fra-1 and its downstream genes (VEGF, STAT3 and pSTAT3) | Progression, metastasis | [ |
| miR-7 | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | High expression was associated with ER (+) status in IBC, also associated with prolonged MFS of IBC patients | EGFR, IGF1R, Wave3 | Proliferation, metastasis, invasion | [ |
| miR-324-5p | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Up-regulation of miR-324-5p was related to prolonged MFS in IBC phenotype | CUEDC2 | Invasion, metastasis | [ |
| miR-21 | IBC/non-IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Increased level of miR-21 was associated with higher grade in IBC, and higher stages and unfavorable molecular subtypes in non-IBC | PDCD4, PTEN, SPRY2 BCL2, TPM1, MASPIN | Migration, invasion, metastasis | [ |
| miR-205 | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Down-regulated | Down-regulated in IBC and lower expression of miR-205 was associated with shorter distant metastasis-free survival and overall survival | ZEB1, ZEB2, HER3, AMOT, erbB2/erbB3 | Proliferation, invasion, metastasis | [ |
| miR-29a, miR-30b and miR-520a-5p | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | – | Significant associations between specific miRNA target gene expression and patient outcome (DMFS, RFS and OS) | BRWD1, NRIP1, RAPGEF6, TMPO, ABCE1… | Proliferation, invasion, metastasis | [ |
| miR-520a-5p | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Higher levels of IBC specific miR-520a-5p target gene expression with a shorter DMFS, RFS or OS in non-IBC | TMPO, ABCE1, KPNA1, PTP4A2… | Invasion, metastasis | [ |
| A 5-miRNA signature (miR-421, miR-486, miR-503, miR-720 and miR-1303) | IBC/non-IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | – | This signature is predictive for IBC phenotype with an overall accuracy of 89%, also an independent predictor of poor metastasis-free survival in non-IBC patients | FXR, DPC4/Smad4, ATM, ANK, CCND1, TWIST1, GSK3β, SFRP1, CLDN18 | Proliferation, invasion, migration, metastasis | [ |
| miR-421 | IBC/non-IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Up-regulated in IBC, higher miR-421 expression associated with higher histological grade in non-IBC and IBC and a significant poorer MFS in non-IBC | FXR, DPC4/Smad4, ATM | Proliferation, migration | [ |
| miR-486 | IBC/non-IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Over-expressed in IBC, higher miR-486 expression levels associated with longer MFS in non-IBC | ANK | Proliferation, apoptosis | [ |
| miR-503 | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Most highly over-expressed in IBC, high miR-503 expression was correlated with higher stage breast cancer | CCND1 | Proliferation | [ |
| miR-720 | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Up-regulated | Significantly up-regulated in both IBC/nonIBC and IBC/normal | TWIST1 | Invasion, migration | [ |
| miR-1303 | IBC | Primary tissue | Prognosis | Down-regulated | miR-1303 was down-regulated in IBC/non-IBC, and high expression was associated with estrogen receptor positive status in IBC | GSK3β, SFRP1, CLDN18 | Proliferation, invasion | [ |
Fig. 9Schema of miRNA and IBC
Fig. 1Schema of miR-301 regulated pathways. A proposed model wherein miR-301 overexpression in human breast cancer can downregulate several mRNA targets, including Col2A1, PTEN, FoxF2, and BBC3. In turn, downregulation of Col2A1 can lead to increased migration and invasion. Similarly, PTEN downregulation will lead to Akt activation, which can promote VEGF expression, with increased tumor angiogenesis. Downregulation of FoxF2 can increase expression of Wnt5a, which can promote cell proliferation. In parallel, SKA2 is also co-expressed with miR-301, which can also potentially increase proliferation [40]
Fig. 2Schema of miR-451 regulated YWHAZ pathway. miR-451 markedly inhibited expression of β-catenin via YWHAZ and subsequently inhibited downstream gene cyclin D1, c-Myc expression, which leads to paclitaxel resistance. Thus, downregulation of miR-451 is able to upregulate YWHAZ expression so that may reduce paclitaxel resistance in IBC [41]
Fig. 3The complete gene targets of miR-15a identified to date and the effects of downregulating these target genes
Fig. 4Schema of miR-19a-3p regulated Fra-1 gene pathway. miR-19a-3p, which regulates TAMs in the breast tumor microenvironment, is able to regulate the phenotype of TAMs by targeting the Fra-1 gene and other genes in its downstream signaling pathway. IL-6 activates M2 polarization-related signal pathways of TAMs by inhibiting miR-19a-3p expression. The downregulation of miR-19a-3p expression in TAMs is likely due to TME induction, which promotes transformation of M1 to M2 and results in the enhancement of migration and invasion of breast cancer cells
Fig. 5Schema of miR-7 regulated EGFR, IGF1R and Wave3 pathway. miR-7 is expressed at a low level in highly invasive cells, and when added as a form of mimic, it appears to play a more potent role in inhibition of invasive breast cancer cell migration. More importantly, miR-7 mimic indeed has a dual effect as it also significantly inhibits the proliferative, chemotactic and angiogenic-like homing characteristics of endothelial cells especially in response to o chemoattractant factors produced by aggressive breast cancer cells, also suggesting that miR-7 may be developed as an anti-cancer therapeutic potentially capable of suppressing breast cancer metastasis and tumour-associated angiogenesis simultaneously [52]
Fig. 6Schema of miR-21 regulated PTEN, PDCD4, SPRY2 pathway. Schematic diagram representing the mechanism of LPA-induced early steps of metastasis formation. Acting on LPA1 receptor LPA activates PI3K/AKT inducing ZEB1 expression and down-stream activation of miR-21 that by inhibiting the expression of anti-metastatic genes (PTEN, PDCD4, SPRY2) induces cell migration, invasion and metastasis dissemination
Fig. 7A model of the miR-21-FOXO3a-miR-34b/c signaling in breast cancer. Oncogenic miR-21 up-regulation promoted PI3K/AKT signaling activation through directly inhibiting PTEN expression, a suppressor of PI3 K/AKT. The activation of AKT phosphorylates FOXO3a resulting in relocalization of FOXO3a proteins from nucleus to the cytoplasm. Nuclear FOXO3a down-regulation reduced the binding efficiency of FOXO3a in the promoter of miR-34b/c leading to decreases in the expression levels of miR-34b and miR-34c in cells
Fig. 8Schema of miR-205 regulated ZEB1, ZEB2, EMT pathway. A model for the regulatory mechanism of EMT by Mel-18. Loss of Mel-18 in breast cancer leads to hypermethylation of the CGrich region of the miR-205 promoter by regulating recruitment of DNMT family proteins to the miR-205 proximal promoter, and results in downregulation of miR-205 expression. This epigenetic repression of miR-205 leads to upregulation of the target genes, ZEB1 and ZEB2, and consequently activates ZEB1- and ZEB2-mediated repression of E-cadherin transcription. Thus, loss of E-cadherin by the miR-205/ZEB1-ZEB2 cascade following Mel-18 depletion in breast cancer induces the EMT and tumor invasion