| Literature DB >> 32013263 |
Francesca Varrone1, Emilia Caputo2.
Abstract
Melanoma is the less common but the most malignant skin cancer. Since the survival rate of melanoma metastasis is about 10-15%, many different studies have been carried out in order to find a more effective treatment. Although the development of target-based therapies and immunotherapeutic strategies has improved chances for patient survival, melanoma treatment still remains a big challenge for oncologists. Here, we collect recent data about the emerging role of melanoma-associated microRNAs (miRNAs) currently available treatments, and their involvement in drug resistance. We also reviewed miRNAs as prognostic factors, because of their chemical stability and resistance to RNase activity, in melanoma progression. Moreover, despite miRNAs being considered small conserved regulators with the limitation of target specificity, we outline the dual role of melanoma-associated miRNAs, as oncogenic and/or tumor suppressive factors, compared to other tumors.Entities:
Keywords: drug resistance; melanoma; metastasis; miRNAs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013263 PMCID: PMC7037367 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21030878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of melanoma onset and progression. Melanoma onset and progression described in the text was illustrated, underlining its clonal evolution, phenotype switching, and high heterogeneity [10].
Figure 2Melanoma treatment advances. Target-based therapy (A) and immunotherapy drugs (B) FDA-approved.
Most representative tumor suppressor miRNAs and OncomiR (orange) involved in melanoma metastasis.
| miRNA | Function | Target | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Tumor suppressor | NF-κB1-SNAIL1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MDM2 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MMP14 and SNAIL | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MITF | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | c-Kit | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | SNAIL, Sox4 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MET | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MET | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MITF; PIK3R3 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MITF | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | TLR4; Oct4, Sox2, c-Myc | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | HIF1α | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | SIX-1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | TERT | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | Lin28B | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | CCND1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MET | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | TLR4 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | RLIP76 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | C-jun | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | SKI | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | ITGAV and ROCK1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | GEF-H1/RhoA | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | mTOR and c-Met | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | BMI-1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | E2F1 and E2F5 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | AP1S2, SOX11, IGFBP5, SERINC3, RAP1A | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | BMI-1; SLUG | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | CIP2A, BMI-1, CREB1, MITF | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | PIK3R3/AKT3 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | NRP1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MCL-1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MACC1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MITF | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MCL1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | AKT | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | BRAF, MDM2 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | BRAF, ERK2 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | PIM1 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | INPP4B | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | MTDH | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | ITGB3 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | ITGB3 | [ |
|
| Tumor suppressor | BSG; Cyclin D1/D3 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | ITCH | [ |
|
| OncomiR | ETV1 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | PITX1 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | TIMP3, PTEN, PDCD4, FBXO11; TP53 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | DKK3; RBM47 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | GALNT7 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | GALNT7 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | NEDD9 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | NUMB | [ |
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| OncomiR | MITF, FOXO3, MTSS1 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | TFAP2C | [ |
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| OncomiR | TXNIP | [ |
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| OncomiR | ApoE; DNAJA4 | [ |
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| OncomiR | ApoE; DNAJA4 | [ |
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| OncomiR | c-KIT, P27KIP1 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | c-KIT, P27KIP1 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | MITF | [ |
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| OncomiR | SIK1 | [ |
|
| OncomiR | TXNIP | [ |
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| OncomiR | EphA4 | [ |
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| OncomiR | RUNX3 | [ |
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| OncomiR | TP53, INP2 | [ |
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| OncomiR | ApoE; DNAJA4 | [ |
Figure 3Schematic representation of several miRNAs able to regulate MITF, a master regulator of melanocyte development and of melanomagenesis.
The most representative miRNAs that are drug sensitive (green) and drug resistant (orange) to target-based therapy and chemotherapy in melanoma metastasis.
| miRNA | Function | Target | References | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Drug sensitive | EGFR/IGF-1R/CRAF | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug sensitive | SOX10 | [ | Chemotherapy |
|
| Drug sensitive | MCL-1 | [ | BRAFi (vemurafenib) |
|
| Drug sensitive | ADAM9 and VEGF-A | [ | BRAFi (dabrafenib) |
|
| Drug sensitive | HIF-1a/VEGF | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug sensitive | BM1 | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug sensitive | BRAF and ERK2 | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug sensitive | BRAF, MDMD2 | [ | BRAFi + MEKi |
|
| Drug sensitive | NFIX | [ | chemotherapy (carboplatin/paclitaxel) |
|
| Drug resistant | CCL-2 | [ | BRAFi (vemurafenib) |
|
| Drug resistant | IGF1R | [ | Chemotherapy (Cisplatin) |
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| Drug resistant | CCL-2 | [ | BRAFi (vemurafenib) |
|
| Drug resistant | BAK1, MLK3 | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug resistant | CCL-2 | [ | BRAFi (vemurafenib) |
|
| Drug resistant | NUAK1/ARK5, IGFBP5, TGF-bRII, Slug, and CHD5 | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug resistant | NUAK1/ARK5, IGFBP5, TGF-bRII, Slug, and CHD5 | [ | BRAFi |
|
| Drug sensitive | NF1 | [ | BRAFi |
The most representative miRNAs involved in the regulation of melanoma immunotherapy.
| miRNA | Target | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| ETV1 | [ |
|
| TIM-3, B- and T-lymphocyte | [ |
|
| GalNac transferase | [ |
|
| NKG2D, MICA/B; ULBP2 | [ |
|
| STAT1/IFN | [ |
|
| IL-1b, MITF-M | [ |
|
| CDK6 | [ |
|
| HIF-alpha | [ |
|
| MICB | [ |
|
| MICB | [ |
|
| PTEN | [ |
The most representative miRNAs with an opposite role in melanoma and other tumors.
| miRNA | References |
|---|---|
| miR-9 | [ |
| miR-21 | [ |
| MiR-30b | [ |
| MiR-30d | [ |
| miR-125b | [ |
| miR-155 | [ |
| miR-146a | [ |
| miR-205-5p | [ |
| miR-211 | [ |
| miR-224 5p | [ |
| miR-452 | [ |
| miR-542-3p | [ |