| Literature DB >> 31191004 |
Long Long1, Xue Zhang1, Jian Bai2,3, Yizhou Li4, Xiaolong Wang5, Yunfeng Zhou1.
Abstract
Lung cancer is the most prevalent and deadly malignancy. Radiotherapy is a major treatment modality for lung cancer. Nevertheless, radioresistance poses a daunting challenge that largely limits the efficacy of radiotherapy. There is a pressing need for deciphering molecular mechanisms underlying radioresistance and elucidating novel therapeutic targets for individualized radiotherapy. MicroRNAs are categorized as small noncoding RNAs that modulate target-gene expression posttranscriptionally and are implicated in carcinogenesis and cancer resistance to treatment. Overwhelming evidence has unraveled that tissue-specific miRNAs are essential for regulation of the radiosensitivity in lung cancer cells through a complex interaction with multiple biological processes and radiation-induced pathways. Moreover, exosome-derived miRNAs are a novel horizon in lung cancer treatment in which exosomal miRNAs act as potential diagnostic and therapeutic biomarkers of radiotherapy. In the present review, we discuss the mediation of key biological processes and signaling pathways by tissue-specific miRNAs in lung cancer radiotherapy. Additionally, we provide new insight into the potential significance of exosomal miRNAs in radiation response. Lastly, we highlight miRNAs as promising predictors and therapeutic targets to tailor personalized lung cancer radiotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: exosome; lung cancer; microRNAs; personalized radiotherapy; radioresistance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31191004 PMCID: PMC6525830 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S198966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Figure 1An overview of tissue-specific miRNAs in the regulation of lung cancer radiosensitivity.Notes: MiRNAs exert essential function to regulate the radiosensitivity of lung cancer cells, through complex interaction with multiple biological processes including DNA damage response, cell cycle and apoptosis, hypoxic tumor microenvironment, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, cancer stem cells and radiation-induced signaling pathways.
Figure 2miRNAs in DNA-damage response, cell cycle, and apoptosis.Notes: Radiotherapy utilizes ionizing radiation to generate free radicals and intermediate ions, which damage tumor cells at different levels, especially with DNA double-strand breaks, initiating diverse signaling pathways to repair. Cyclins and CDKs are indispensable regulators of cell-cycle transition, which can be suppressed by checkpoints at G1/S and G2/M interphases, ultimately to arrest cell-cycle progression and allow enough time for DNA-damage repair. If DNA damage is too severe to repair, cells will proceed to apoptosis or programmed cell death.Abbreviations: IR, ionizing radiation; PKcs, PK catalytic subunits.
Roles of tissue-specific miRNAs in regulating lung cancer radiosensitivity
| miRNA | Target | Effect | Response | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR208a | p21 | Decreases cell apoptosis | Radioresistant | |
| miR328-3p | γH2AX | Inhibits survival, predicts poor outcome of NSCLC patients | Radiosensitive | |
| miR30a | ATF1 | Inhibits DNA-damage repair, blocks G2/M arrest, and enhances radiation-induced apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR101 | ATM and DNA-PKcs | Inhibits DNA repair | Radiosensitive | |
| miR1323 | PRKDC | Enhances DNA-damage repair | Radioresistant | |
| miR34a | RAD51 | Regulates HR, inhibits DSB repair, miR34a delivery (MRX34) plus RT show therapeutic potential | Radiosensitive | |
| miR25 | BTG2 | Increases apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR29c | Bcl2 and Mcl1 | Increases apoptosis, longer relapse-free survival of patients | Radiosensitive | |
| miR122 | IGF1R | Enhances DSBs, apoptosis, and anchorage-independent growth inhibition induced by IR | Radiosensitive | |
| miR511 | TRIB2 | Inhibits cell growth, increased apoptosis and triggers Bax activation | Radiosensitive | |
| miR95 | SNX1 | Decreases apoptosis | Radioresistant | |
| miR124 | STAT3 | Enhances radiation-induced apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR‐198 | MET | Inhibits HGF–cMet signaling pathway, induces apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR21 | PDCD4 | Decreases cell apoptosis, activates PI3K–Akt–mTOR pathway, shorter median survival time | Radioresistant | |
| miR210 | — | Promotes hypoxic phenotype and DSB repair | Radioresistant | |
| miR148b | ROCK1 | Inhibits proliferation and EMT and promotes cell apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR200c | — | Activates EGFR-associated signaling, increases cell killing, and regulatesEMT | Radiosensitive | |
| miR145 | OCT4, SOX2, and Fascin 1 | suppressed the proliferation of CSCs and improved radioresistance | Radiosensitive | |
| miR21/95 | — | Inhibit PTEN, SNX1, and SGPP1 expression and elevates Akt phosphorylation | Radioresistant | |
| miR18a-5p | ATM and HIF1α | Inhibits DNA repair; predicts radiosensitivity | Radiosensitive | |
| miR373 | TIMP2 | Regulates PI3K–Akt and Smad signaling pathways | Radioresistant | |
| miR126 | — | Promotes apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR451 | — | Enhances apoptosis, activates PTEN | Radiosensitive | |
| miR99a | mTOR | Induces G1 arrest and apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| miR9 | NRP1 | Regulates PI3K–Akt, MARK/RK, and NFκB pathways, and inhibits apoptosis | Radioresistant | |
| miR9 and let-7 | — | Suppresses NFκB1 | Radiosensitive | |
| miR15a/16 | TLR1 | TLR1–NFκB pathway, increases apoptosis | Radiosensitive | |
| let-7a | — | Attenuates Kras expression | Radiosensitive | |
| miR155 | TP53INP1 | Enhances IR-induced senescence and cell killing, regulates p53 and p38 MAPK pathways | Radiosensitive | |
| miR214 | FoxO4 | Inhibits apoptosis and senescence and regulates p38 MAPK | Radioresistant |
Abbreviations: NSCLC, non-small-cell lung cancer; RT, radiotherapy; IR, ionizing radiation; PKcs, PK catalytic subunits; HR, homologous recombination; DSBs, double-strand breaks; EMT, epithelial–mesenchymal transition.
Figure 3Exosomes and exosomal miRNAs in lung cancer therapy.Notes: Exosomes are small membrane–derived vesicles in circulating body fluids that are released by multiple cell types, including tumor cells and normal cells. Exosomes specialize in intracellular communication, via transporting diverse molecular constitutes. Exosomal cargoes are mainly small regulatory molecules, including miRNAs, mRNAs, DNA, and proteins. Among them, exosomal miRNAs may be promising in regulating cellular radiosensitivity and monitoring radiotherapy effectiveness.
Exosomal miRNAs in lung cancer
| Exosomal miRNA | Target | Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR208a | P21 | Promotes cell proliferation, induces radioresistance, activates Akt–mTOR pathway | |
| miR21 | STAT3 | Promotes angiogenesis, transforms human bronchial epithelium | |
| miR23a | PHD1/2, ZO1 protein | Increases angiogenesis, vascular permeability, and cancer transendothelial migration in hypoxic microenvironment | |
| miR210 | FGFRL1, E2F3, VMP1, RAD52, SDHD | Increases angiogenesis by promoting tube-formation activity of umbilical vein endothelial cell | |
| miR96 | LMO7 | Enhances cell viability, migration, and cisplatin resistance | |
| miR512-5p | TEAD4 | Reduces cisplatin-induced apoptosis, cell migration, and cell proliferation | |
| miR373 | RelA, PIK3CA | Reduces cisplatin-induced apoptosis and cell migration | |
| miR146a-5p | Atg12 | Decreases resistance to cisplatin and recurrence rates of patients | |
| miR29a-3p, miR150-5p | — | Radiation dose–related |