| Literature DB >> 35480113 |
Rana S Moubarak1,2,3, Lisa Koetz-Ploch1,2, Gavriel Mullokandov4, Avital Gaziel1,2, Ana de Pablos-Aragoneses1,2, Diana Argibay1,2, Kevin Kleffman1,2, Elena Sokolova1,2, Marianne Berwick5, Nancy E Thomas6, Iman Osman2,3,7, Brian D Brown4, Eva Hernando1,2,3.
Abstract
Melanoma is a highly prevalent cancer with an increasing incidence worldwide and high metastatic potential. Brain metastasis is a major complication of the disease, as more than 50% of metastatic melanoma patients eventually develop intracranial disease. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been found to play an important role in the tumorigenicity of different cancers and have potential as markers of disease outcome. Identification of relevant miRNAs has generally stemmed from miRNA profiling studies of cells or tissues, but these approaches may have missed miRNAs with relevant functions that are expressed in subfractions of cancer cells. We performed an unbiased in vivo screen to identify miRNAs with potential functions as metastasis suppressors using a lentiviral library of miRNA decoys. Notably, we found that a significant fraction of melanomas that metastasized to the brain carried a decoy for miR-124a, a miRNA that is highly expressed in the brain/neurons. Additional loss- and gain-of-function in vivo validation studies confirmed miR-124a as a suppressor of melanoma metastasis and particularly of brain metastasis. miR-124a overexpression did not inhibit tumor growth in vivo, underscoring that miR-124a specifically controls processes required for melanoma metastatic growth, such as seeding and growth post-extravasation. Finally, we provide proof of principle of this miRNA as a promising therapeutic agent by showing its ability to impair metastatic growth of melanoma cells seeded in distal organs. Our efforts shed light on miR-124a as an antimetastatic agent, which could be leveraged therapeutically to impair metastatic growth and improve patient survival.Entities:
Keywords: Melanoma ; brain metastasis; metastasis; microRNA; tumor suppressor
Year: 2022 PMID: 35480113 PMCID: PMC9036958 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.852952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1In vivo screen of suppressors of melanoma metastasis. (A) Schematic of the lentiviral vector-based miRNA decoy vector (25). miRNA decoy target sites were cloned into a lentiviral vector downstream of the U6 promoter. This vector also encodes GFP as a reporter from a separate promoter. (B) Schematic representation of the in vivo brain metastasis screen: The 113/6-4L melanoma cells transduced with control (Empty Vector) or with a lentiviral library pool of decoys targeting 291 miRNAs (miRNAs Library Decoy) were transplanted by ultrasound-guided intracardiac injection in athymic/nude female mice (Decoy Empty, n = 6; miRNA Decoy Library, n = 12). (C) Deep sequencing of accelerated metastatic lesions revealed miR-124a decoy as enriched (% reads for a particular Decoy over total number of reads) in brain metastases from different mice. Scale shows enrichment of specific miRNA decoys in the metastatic lesions sequenced.
Figure 2miR-124a silencing enhances melanoma metastasis. (A) Relative expression of miR-124a (unpaired t test; **p = 0.003) and (B) its targets was measured by quantitative RT-PCR after lentiviral infection of 113/6-4L with mCherry-Luciferase and Dc-Scr or Dc-124a tagged with a GFP reporter (unpaired t test; EZH2 **p = 0.0019, MAPK14 **p = 0.0059, and SPRY2 *p = 0.0189). (C) Schematic representation of the in vivo metastasis model in athymic/nude female mice (n = 8 per group). (D) miR-124a silencing significantly accelerates both brain (**p = 0.0069) and extracranial metastasis (***p = 0.001) burden, as measured by in vivo bioluminescence imaging using IVIS (Mann–Whitney test). (E) Representative brain images at termination were obtained using a dissecting scope (Leica). (F) Overall survival is significantly decreased upon miR-124a silencing. Mice were humanely euthanized once they present symptoms of distress or >20% of weight loss. The experiment was terminated when mice from the Dc-Scr group that remained alive at day 100 were euthanized (Mantel–Cox test; **p = 0.0055).
Figure 3miR-124a constitutive overexpression suppresses metastasis and particularly brain metastasis. The 113/6-4L-mCherry-Luciferase cells were transduced with miRH-Scr or miRH-124a tagged with a GFP reporter. (A) Efficient miRNA-124a overexpression (unpaired t test; **p = 0.0083) and (B) consequent repression of its targets were measured by quantitative RT-PCR (unpaired t test; EZH2 *p = 0.05, MAPK14 *p = 0.02, and SPRY2 *p = 0.038). (C) Schematic representation of the in vivo metastasis model using cells generated in (A) in nude female mice (n = 6 per group). (D) Incidence of brain and extracranial metastases in both groups is shown. Extracranial metastases refer to lung and/or ovary metastases (two-sided chi-square test, ****p < 0.0001). (E) miR-124a overexpression significantly inhibits both brain (**p = 0.0043) and extracranial metastasis (**p = 0.0087) burden, as measured by in vivo bioluminescence imaging using IVIS at experiment termination (Mann–Whitney test). (F) Representative GFP fluorescence pictures of brain metastasis in mice from both groups are shown (Leica).
Figure 4miR-124a overexpression does not inhibit subcutaneous tumor formation nor established tumor growth. (A) Schematic representation of in vivo tumor growth model: The 113/6-4L -GFP-Luciferase cells were stably transduced with doxycycline-inducible control TRIPZ-miR-Scr or TRIPZ-miR-124a tagged with a tRFP reporter and injected with Matrigel (1:1) into the flank of NSG female mice. Cells were treated with doxycycline (2 µg/ml) prior to injection, and mice were fed doxycycline chow since the intracardiac inoculation. (B) Constitutive miR-124a overexpression in 113/6-4L cells did not affect tumor volume (C) nor weight at termination of the experiment (Day 34). (D) Schematic representation of in vivo growth after implantation: The 113/6-4L -GFP-Luciferase cells were stably transduced with doxycycline-inducible control TRIPZ-miR-Scr or TRIPZ-miR-124a tagged with a tRFP reporter and injected with Matrigel (1:1) into the flank of NOG/SCID female mice. Once tumors were palpable (Day 14 post-injection), mice were fed doxycycline chow (200 mg/kg). (E) Inducible miR-124a overexpression in established tumors did not affect tumor volume (F) nor weight at termination of the experiment (Day 34). ns, non significant.
Figure 5miR-124a overexpression inhibits established metastases. (A) The 113/6-4L melanoma cells were transduced with GFP-Luciferase followed by TRIPZ-Scr or TRIPZ-miR-124a lentiviral infections. Efficient miRNA-124 overexpression after doxycycline treatment in vitro was assessed by RT-qPCR (unpaired t test; *****p = 0.000005). (B) Schematic representation of in vivo metastasis assay with inducible overexpression of miR-124a: The 113/6-4L-GFP-Luciferase cells transduced with doxycycline-inducible control (TRIPZ-miR-Scr) or (TRIPZ-miR-124a) tagged with a tRFP reporter were selected with puromycin, and ultrasound-guided intracardiac injection was performed in NSG mice (n = 11 per group). Mice were initiated on doxycycline (200 mg/kg) chow 8 days post-injection. (C) RFP and GFP fluorescence images of brain, lung, liver, and kidneys in all mice are shown, and the areas of metastatic lesions were plotted using ImageJ (red dots: RFP+ metastases; green dots: GFP+ metastases). Unpaired t test was used for statistical significance of differences in brain (***p = 0.0006 for RFP+ metastases in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group; ns, p = 0.274 for GFP+ in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group), lung (**p = 0.0041 for RFP+ metastases in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group; ***p = 0.00056 for GFP+ in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group), liver (*****p < 0.000001 for RFP+ metastases in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group; ns, p = 0.056 for GFP+ in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group), and kidney (***p = 0.00033 for RFP+ metastases in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group; ns, p = 0.058 for GFP+ in miR124a vs. miR-Scr group) metastases. (D) Expression of miR-124a in RFP-/GFP+ and RFP+/GFP+ liver metastatic foci dissected from two representative mice (#16 and #18) from the miR124a group is measured by quantitative RT-qPCR (unpaired t test; *p = 0.018 for mouse 16 and ***p = 0.0011 and **p = 0.005 for mouse 18). (E) Representative images of the liver and kidney sizes of two mice from both groups are shown. ns, non significant.
Figure 6Low miR-124a levels in primary melanoma correlate with recurrence, brain metastasis recurrence, and decreased brain metastasis-free survival. Primary human melanoma samples were collected at the time of surgery from 92 patients enrolled in the NYU Melanoma Program (IMCG) database. miRNA expression profiling of FFPE-extracted RNAs from primary melanomas was performed by Exiqon, Inc., using miRCURY™ LNA arrays (Exiqon, Denmark) (20). (A) Relative miRNA-124 expression was compared between primary tumors based on their recurrence status (Mann–Whitney test; *p = 0.047). (B) Relative miRNA-124 expression in primary tumors that eventually metastasized to the brain (Bmet) vs. primary tumors that did not metastasize or metastasized to other organs (No-Bmet) (Mann–Whitney test; *p = 0.02). (C) Brain metastasis-free survival analysis shows that low miR-124a correlates with increased brain metastasis incidence (Breslow–Wilcoxon test; *p = 0.05). Low and high miR-124a levels are relative to the median expression.