| Literature DB >> 32565738 |
Babak Otoukesh1,2, Mehdi Abbasi3, Habib-O-Lah Gorgani2, Hossein Farahini2, Mehdi Moghtadaei2, Bahram Boddouhi2, Peyman Kaghazian4, Shayan Hosseinzadeh5, Atefe Alaee6.
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) involved in key signaling pathways and aggressive phenotypes of osteosarcoma (OS) was discussed, including PI3K/AKT/MTOR, MTOR AND RAF-1 signaling, tumor suppressor P53- linked miRNAs, NOTCH- related miRNAs, miRNA -15/16 cluster, apoptosis related miRNAs, invasion-metastasis-related miRNAs, and 14Q32-associated miRNAs cluster. Herrin, we discussed insights into the targeted therapies including miRNAs (i.e., tumor-suppressive miRNAs and oncomiRNAs). Using bioinformatics tools, the interaction network of all OS-associated miRNAs and their targets was also depicted.Entities:
Keywords: MicroRNAs; Osteosarcoma; Targets; Therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32565738 PMCID: PMC7302353 DOI: 10.1186/s12935-020-01342-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell Int ISSN: 1475-2867 Impact factor: 5.722
Clinical trial development by MiRNA; data were adapted from https://clinicaltrials.gov
| Study title | Conditions | Interventions | Study type and phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma microRNA, lung cancer | Lung cancer | Screening | Interventional study, not applicable |
| MicroRNA-155 and telomerase reverse transcriptase, non-muscle invasive bladder cancer | bladder cancer and disease | Diagnostic method: miRNA -155 Diagnostic method: Human telomerase reverse transcriptase | interventional, not applicable |
| Plasma microRNAs, pelvic gynecologic tumors | Ovarian cancer Endometrial cancer | Other: blood sample | Interventional study, not applicable |
| Circulating miRNAs, breast cancer | Breast cancer | Drug: tamoxifen, letrozole, anastrozole, exemestane | Interventional study, Phase 4 |
| A 6 microRNA Tool for Stratifying Stage II colon cancer | Colonic Chemotherapy | A 6 microRNA stratified tool | Interventional study, Not applicable |
| MicroRNA in NAF, serum, and tissue, breast cancer | Breast Cancer Ductal carcinoma in situ | Drug application: intranasal oxytocin | Interventional study, Phase 2 |
| A multicenter phase I study of MRX34, MicroRNA miR-RX34 liposomal injection | Primary liver cancer SCLC Lymphoma | Drug application: MRX34 | Interventional study, Phase 1 |
| MicroRNA involved in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma | Cancer of the Skin | Genetic: arm A | Interventional study, not applicable |
| Plasma miRNAs for Predicting Radiosensitivity in Advanced Non-small Cell Lung Cancer | Advanced non-small cell lung cancer | Radiotherapy | Interventional study, not applicable |
Observational clinical trial development by MiRNAs; all data was adapted and collected from https://clinicaltrials.gov
| Study title (reference) | Conditions | Interventions | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Circulating microRNA for cardiotoxicity in breast cancer | Breast cancer | – | Observational |
| MicroRNAs Tool for stratifying stage II colon cancer | Colon cancer, effects of chemotherapy | Device: miRNA tool | Observational |
| MicroRNA processing enzymes dicer and drosha | Skin cancer | – | Observational |
| MicroRNA blood test for lung cancer screening | Lung cancer | – | Observational |
| Micro RNAs for prediction of response to androgen deprivation therapy | Prostate cancer | Drug: bicalutamide, leuprolide, goserelin | Observational |
| Investigating the role of novel molecular profiles, microRNA’s, and their targets in colorectal cancer progression | Colorectal cancer | Biomarker study | Observational |
| MIRNA profiling of breast cancer | Breast cancer | – | Observational |
| Circulating microRNA as a tool for primary brain tumors | Brain tumors | – | Observational |
| The utility of circulating tumour cells and plasma microRNA | Esophageal cancer | Blood draw | Observational |
| Anti-IMP3 Autoantibody and MicroRNA signature blood tests for detection of metastatic kidney cancer | Kidney cancer | Genetic: gene and protein expression analysis Diagnostic tools: laboratory biomarker | Observational |
| MicroRNAs for diagnosis of pulmonary cancer | Pulmonary cancer | Blood punction | Observational |
| Circulating miRNAs. ICORG 10–11, V2 | Breast ccancer, Recurrent breast cancer | – | Observational |
| Lipidomics, proteomics, micro RNAs and volatile organic compounds | Pancreatic neoplasms | blood and bile | Observational |
| Chemoresistance in epithelial ovarian cancer | Ovarian Cancer | – | Observational |
| MicroRNA-10b in patients with gliomas | Astrocytoma, oligodendroglioma, oligoastrocytoma | – | Observational |
| MicroRNAs in neurofibromatosis type 1 | Glioma Neurofibromatosis Type 1 | – | Observational |
| Microarray analysis in basal cell carcinoma | Basal cell carcinoma | – | Observational |
| Microarray analysis of microRNA in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma | Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma | – | Observational |
| MicroRNA expression in renal cell carcinoma | Renal cell carcinoma | – | Observational |
| The role of microRNA in cutaneous melanoma | Melanoma | – | Observational |
Fig. 1Possible ways to release circulating miRNAs; 3 pathways including extracellular vesicles, RNA-binding proteins and/or transfer through cell gap junction are involved. In addition, the topology of the network was analyzed based on degree metrics in order to find the most important nodes. According to the findings, 5 nodes with large degrees in our large network (i.e., > 9, see green nodes) including BCL2, VEGFA, CCND1, PTEN and MET were identified as potential hub nodes, (Additional file 1, and Fig. 2)
Fig. 2the sub-network showed the potential hub gene nodes (nodes with over 9 in degrees): BCL2 (13), VEGFA (12), CCND1 (11), PTEN (11), MET (10) and miRNAs that regulated them
Circulating miRNA(s) in patients suffering from osteosarcoma
| OncomiRNA and tumour suppressor miRNA(s) | Clinical findings | References |
|---|---|---|
| miR-9Om | Increased levels of miR-9 were found to be related to higher TNM stage, distant metastasis and large tumour size; as well as poor S | Fei et al. [ |
| miR-17Om | Increased level was detected in OS patients, where it was linked to poor S; Serum miR-17 levels was reported to be linked to tensin homolog (PTEN) expression and tissue phosphatase | Li et al. [ |
| miR-24Om | Increased serum and tissue miR-24 levels were detected in OS patients | Sun et al. [ |
| miR-27aOm | Higher miR-27a levels was detected to be linked to higher clinical stage, and distant metastasis; Higher miR-27a levels was found to be correlated with poor response to chemotherapy, and was capable of differentiating OS from HC; it serves as an independent prognostic marker of unfavourable survival | Tang et al. [ |
| miR-34bT | Decreased plasma level and low tissue expression of miR-34b were detected, lower level has been found in metastatic patients, it was considered as circulating tumour suppressor miRNA | Tian et al. [ |
| miR-25-3pOm | miR-25-3p level was increased in OS patients; its increase was linked to poor PFS, and it was capable of differentiating OS from healthy control. | Fujiwara et al. [ |
| miR-29 familyOm | Higher miR-29a/b/c levels were detected to be associated with OS in evaluated patients; this markers serves as independent prognostic factors of unfavourable survival | Hong et al. [ |
miR-21, miR-143, miR-199a-3pOm | MiR-21 levels increased in OS, whereas miR-143 and miR-199a-3p levels were decreased in OS Decreased levels of MiR-21 and miR-143 were found to be linked to metastasis and histological subtype; Low level of miR-199-3p was linked to histological subtype Increased miR-21 was found in the blood, where its high expression was linked to higher Enneking stage and chemotherapeutic resistance | Ouyang et al. [ |
| miR-95-3pTs | Decreased serum level of miR-95-3p was indicated to be linked to clinical stage, metastasis and chemotherapy response. It was considered as circulating tumour suppressor miRNA | Niu et al. [ |
| miR-125bOm | Decreased level of miR-125b was linked to advanced tumour stages Furthermore, it was capable of differentiating chemotherapy-resistant patients from chemotherapy-sensitive | Luo et al. [ |
miR-133b miR-206Ts | MiR-133b and miR-206 downregulation were found to be related to advanced tumour grade, metastasis and recurrence in OS patients’ sera, as well as poor response to chemotherapy in patients. Decreased levels of both miRNAs is attributed to 18 months’ survival time, which is indicated to be a shorter survival in comparison with the mean 24 months survival time in patients with decreased level of only one miRNA; miR-133b and miR-206 may present opportunity as non-invasive biomarker for diagnosis and prognosis of OS | Zhang et al. [ |
| miR-148aOm | Increased expression of circulating miR-148a was linked to increased tumour size and distant metastasis and a negative association with five-year survival in OS patients, where it was revealed to be an independent prognostic factor of unfavourable survival; As a matter of fact, 148a has been suggested to be a vindicator marker for progressive phenotype, and a novel diagnostic biomarker in the peripheral blood for determining poor prognosis in patients suffering from OS | Ma et al. [ |
| miR-152Ts | Lower serum and tissue levels of miR-152 levels were linked to Enneking and metastasis in OS patients; decreased level revealed to be capable of differentiating OS from HC, and serves as an independent prognostic factor for unfavourable survival | Wang et al. [ |
miR-196a, miR-196bOm | Increased levels of tissue and serum miR-196a and miR-196b were detected; Higher serum miR-196a and miR-196b and their co-expressions were linked to advanced tumour grade, recurrence and metastasis status in OS patients; expression levels of both MiRs were related to unfavourable survival | Zhang et al. [ |
miR-195-5p, miR-199a-3p, miR-320a, miR-374a-5pOm | MiRs levels were elevated in OS patients and their downregulation were found in postoperative samples; MiR-195-5p and miR-199a-3p were found to be linked to metastasis status, whereas miR-199a-3p and miR-320a levels were related to histological subtype | Lian et al. [ |
| miR-199a-5pOm | Increased levels of miR-199a-5p levels were detected in OS patients; its decreased level were found in postoperative samples; MiR-199-5p was capable of differentiating OS from healthy control | Zhou et al. [ |
| miR-221Om | Increased level of miR-221 in OS patients, and its tissue and serum levels was found to be prognostic factor of unfavourable survival; MiR-221 was found to be capable of differentiating OS from HC | Yang et al. [ |
| miR-223Ts | Decreased level of miR-223 was linked to advanced clinical stage and distant metastasis | Dong et al. [ |
| miR-300Om | Increased tissue and serum miR-300 levels were detected in OS patients; higher clinical stage and distant metastasis were found to be linked to increased level of miR-300 levels; serum levels found to be reduced in OS patients after curative surgery; serum miR-300 was suggested as an independent prognostic marker of unfavourable survival | Liu et al. [ |
| miR-326Ts | Lower serum and tissue levels of miR-326 levels were detected in OS patients; it serves as circulating tumour suppressor miRNA; MiR-326 was capable of differentiating OS from HC; Decreased serum miR-326 levels were linked to higher clinical stage and distant metastasis, whereas its decrease tissue level was related to distant metastasis; its lower serum level was suggested to be an independent prognostic factor of unfavourable survival | Cao et al. [ |
| miR-497Ts | A circulating tumour suppressor miRNA; lower miR-497 levels was found to be liked to response to chemotherapy, and clinical stage, distant metastasis | Pang et al. [ |
Ts tumour suppressor miRNA(s), Om oncomiRNAs
Fig. 3Limitations and challenges for miRNA delivery into cancer in clinical trials