| Literature DB >> 32192092 |
Valeria Poli1, Laura Seclì1, Lidia Avalle1.
Abstract
The establishment and spreading of cancer involve the acquirement of many biological functions including resistance to apoptosis, enhanced proliferation and the ability to invade the surrounding tissue, extravasate from the primary site, survive in circulating blood, and finally extravasate and colonize distant organs giving origin to metastatic lesions, the major cause of cancer deaths. Dramatic changes in the expression of protein coding genes due to altered transcription factors activity or to epigenetic modifications orchestrate these events, intertwining with a microRNA regulatory network that is often disrupted in cancer cells. microRNAs-143 and -145 represent puzzling players of this game, with apparently contradictory functions. They were at first classified as tumor suppressive due to their frequently reduced levels in tumors, correlating with cell survival, proliferation, and migration. More recently, pro-oncogenic roles of these microRNAs have been described, challenging their simplistic definition as merely tumor-suppressive. Here we review their known activities in tumors, whether oncogenic or onco-suppressive, and highlight how their expression and functions are strongly dependent on their complex regulation downstream and upstream of cytokines and growth factors, on the cell type of expression and on the specific tumor stage.Entities:
Keywords: EMT; miRNA-143; miRNA-145; oncogenes; oncosuppressors; tumorigenesis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32192092 PMCID: PMC7140083 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12030708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Regulation of miR-143 and -145 transcription. Schematic representation of the genetic locus containing the microRNAs, with both positive (squared) and negative (rounded) regulators shown to be relevant for their transcription, in both normal and cancer cells. Regulators with direct transcriptional activity are depicted closer to the DNA, and the color code indicates if they regulate both microRNAs as a cluster (fuchsia) miR-143 only (pink), miR-145 only (violet).
Pro-tumorigenic functions of microRNA-143/145 cluster.
| MiR | Target Gene | Type of Cancer | Cancer-Related Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-143, miR-145 | n.d. | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | Reduced in normal tissue compared to tumor, not detected in tumor cell lines | [ |
| miR-143 |
| Hepatitis B related hepatocellular carcinoma (HBV-HCC) | Upregulated by NF-KB, promotes cell migration, invasion and tumor metastasis | [ |
| miR-143 |
| Prostate cancer | Upregulated during cancer stem cell differentiation, promotes metastasis | [ |
| mir-145 |
| Colorectal cancer | When overexpressed in a metastatic cell line, it increases cell growth and leads to mesenchymal-like cell morphology | [ |
| miR-145 | n.d. | Esophageal adenocarcinoma | Do not affects cell proliferation, accelerates wound closure, enhances cell invasion, protects from anoikis | [ |
| miR-145 | stabilizes HSP27 | Colorectal cancer | Associate with lymph node metastasis. When overexpressed in a CRC cell line, do not affects cell proliferation, promotes migration and invasion in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| miR-143, miR-145 | n.d. | Glioblastoma | Highly expressed in typical areas of invasion and in highly invasive GBM subpopulations, when downregulated invasion is reduced | [ |
| miR-145 |
| Glioblastoma | Enhances invasiveness | [ |
| miR-143, miR-145 | Proposed: | Mammary tumor | Induces EMT features, enhances cell migration | [ |
Figure 2Common functions of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) and miR-143 and -145 during tumor progression. In early stages low levels of both TGF-β and miR-143/145 are required to allow cell proliferation at the primary sites. During tumor progression, some cells undergo epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is induced by TGF-β that, among many other targets, triggers the up-regulation of miR-143 and -145 expression, which in turn, support tissue invasion and metastasis formation.
Figure 3Relative abundance of different cell types in normal tissue and tumor may lead to misinterpretation of miR-143 and -145 expression data in solid tumors. In traditional bioptic samples, the amount of miR-143 and -145 that can be measured by RT-PCR is the result of their expression levels in the bulk of the tumor, including both cancer and stromal cells. As shown here, the expression of both microRNAs is much higher in stromal than in epithelial cells in normal tissues, and the relative abundance of the two cell types is inverted in tumors. This leads to reduced microRNA levels in the tumor bulk even when their expression is actually increased in tumor cells, and to the misleading conclusion that miR-143 and miR-145 are always down-regulated in tumors.