| Literature DB >> 30944831 |
Sook Shien Lee1, Yoke Kqueen Cheah1.
Abstract
Cellular components of the tumour microenvironment (TME) are recognized to regulate the hallmarks of cancers including tumour proliferation, angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis, as well as chemotherapeutic resistance. The linkage between miRNA, TME, and the development of the hallmarks of cancer makes miRNA-mediated regulation of TME a potential therapeutic strategy to complement current cancer therapies. Despite significant advances in cancer therapy, lung cancer remains the deadliest form of cancer among males in the world and has overtaken breast cancer as the most fatal cancer among females in more developed countries. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop more effective treatments for NSCLC, which is the most common type of lung cancer. Hence, this review will focus on current literature pertaining to antitumour or protumourigenic effects elicited by nonmalignant stromal cells of TME in NSCLC through miRNA regulation as well as current status and future prospects of miRNAs as therapeutic agents or targets to regulate TME in NSCLC.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30944831 PMCID: PMC6421779 DOI: 10.1155/2019/3046379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Canonical pathway for miRNA biogenesis. Transcription of miRNA genes results in the formation of primary miRNA (pri-miRNA). Cleavage of pri-miRNA by the Drosha-DiGeorge Syndrome Critical Region 8 (Drosha-DGCR8) complex produces precursor miRNA (pre-miRNA). Pre-miRNAs are then transported from the nucleus to the cytoplasm by the exportin 5/RanGTP transport complex followed by terminal loop cleavage by endoribonuclease Dicer to produce mature miRNA/miRNA duplex. Red and blue strands in mature miRNA/miRNA duplex represent passenger and guide strands, respectively. The duplex is loaded into the Argonaute (AGO) family of proteins, and the passenger strand of the duplex is degraded while the guide strand is retained, forming the miRNA-induced silencing complex (miRISC). The guide strand directs miRISC to target mRNAs, resulting in mRNA degradation and/or translational repression. miRISC directly cleaves target mRNA with perfect compatibility with miRNA. For mRNA with a partial complementary target site, miRISC suppresses its translation initiation by disturbing the formation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4F (eIF4F), a multiprotein complex composed of eIF4E, eIF4G, and eIF4A subunits. Besides, GW182 proteins which are recruited to the miRISC cause translational repression and deadenylation of target mRNAs by the recruitment of the CCR4-NOT and Pan2/Pan3 deadenylase complexes.
Antitumour or protumourigenic effects elicited by the cellular components of TME in NSCLC through miRNA regulation.
| Cellular component of TME | miRNA | Direct target of miRNA | Biological mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) | miRNA-1 | CXCL12 | Downregulated the expression of CXCR4, NF- | [ |
| miRNA-101 | CXCL12 | Blocked the ability of CAFs to stimulate tumour cell proliferation, sphere formation, migration, and invasion and to increase apoptosis of NSCLC cells | [ | |
| miRNA-1, miRNA-206 | VEGFA/CCL2 | Modified the tumour microenvironment generated by CAFs: by reducing tumour angiogenesis, TAM accumulation, tumour growth, and lung metastasis | [ | |
| miRNA-31∗ | FOXO3a | Increased VEGFA expression and lung cancer cells' colony formation | [ | |
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| Tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) | miRNA-130-a | PPAR | Skewed TAM polarization from an M2 toward an M1 phenotype | [ |
| miRNA-1207-5p | CSF1 | Downregulated STAT3 and AKT signaling, resulting in reduced M2 macrophage characters (such as IL-10 and VEGF) and increased M1 macrophage characters (such as IL-12 and IL-23) in macrophage-like differentiated cells (d-THP1) that led to the attenuation of lung cancer growth and metastasis | [ | |
| miRNA-103-a∗ | PTEN | Activation of AKT and STAT3, leading to M2 macrophage polarization and increased proangiogenic factor expression | [ | |
| miRNA-146-a∗ | N/A | Blocked proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1 | [ | |
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| Regulatory T cells (Tregs) | miRNA-141 | CXCL1 | Reduced recruitment of Tregs to the malignant pleural effusion of NSCLC patients, decreased immune escape of tumour cells, inhibited progression of pleural metastasis, and increased survival time of patients | [ |
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| CD4+ tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) | miRNA-155 | N/A | Autophagy blockage in combination with carboplatin treatment increased miRNA-155 expression, leading to CD4+, CD8+, or Foxp3+ regulatory T cell infiltration in the tumour microenvironment of NSCLC tissue samples; these phenomena were speculated to result in the inhibition of metastasis and restoration of chemoresistance in NSCLC | [ |
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| CD8+ tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) | miRNA 200b/a/429 | PD-L1 | Increased CD8+ T cell infiltration, reversed exhausted CD8+ T cell phenotype, reduced tumour burden, and metastases with mesenchymal lung tumours | [ |
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| Tumour-infiltrating natural killer (NK) cells | miRNA-183∗ | DAP12 | TGF- | [ |
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| Dendritic cells | miRNA-301a∗ | N/A | Induced an immunosuppressive microRNA signature in pulmonary DCs by decreasing IL-12 secretion, reducing IFN- | [ |
| miRNA-31∗ | N/A | Hypoxia drove intrinsic miR-31 expression in myeloid DCs. This resulted in the release of tumour-supporting soluble factors (S100A8, A100A9, and VEGF) and the increase in invasiveness of lung carcinoma cells, as indicated by morphological changes (loss of cellular sphericity and the appearance of filopodia-like protrusions) | [ | |
∗Oncogenic miRNAs are indicated with an asterisk.
Figure 2MicroRNA-mediated regulation of the NSCLC tumour microenvironment.