| Literature DB >> 35922753 |
Alireza Mafi1, Atefe Rahmati2,3, Zahra Babaei Aghdam4, Raziyeh Salami5, Marziyeh Salami6, Omid Vakili7, Esmat Aghadavod8,9.
Abstract
Gliomas are the most lethal primary brain tumors in adults. These highly invasive tumors have poor 5-year survival for patients. Gliomas are principally characterized by rapid diffusion as well as high levels of cellular heterogeneity. However, to date, the exact pathogenic mechanisms, contributing to gliomas remain ambiguous. MicroRNAs (miRNAs), as small noncoding RNAs of about 20 nucleotides in length, are known as chief modulators of different biological processes at both transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. More recently, it has been revealed that these noncoding RNA molecules have essential roles in tumorigenesis and progression of multiple cancers, including gliomas. Interestingly, miRNAs are able to modulate diverse cancer-related processes such as cell proliferation and apoptosis, invasion and migration, differentiation and stemness, angiogenesis, and drug resistance; thus, impaired miRNAs may result in deterioration of gliomas. Additionally, miRNAs can be secreted into cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), as well as the bloodstream, and transported between normal and tumor cells freely or by exosomes, converting them into potential diagnostic and/or prognostic biomarkers for gliomas. They would also be great therapeutic agents, especially if they could cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Accordingly, in the current review, the contribution of miRNAs to glioma pathogenesis is first discussed, then their glioma-related diagnostic/prognostic and therapeutic potential is highlighted briefly.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Brain neoplasms; Carcinogenesis; Glioma; MicroRNAs; Therapeutics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35922753 PMCID: PMC9347108 DOI: 10.1186/s11658-022-00354-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Biol Lett ISSN: 1425-8153 Impact factor: 8.702
MicroRNAs involved in the pathogenesis of glioma
| miRNA | Expression pattern | Study model | Sample type | Malignant behavior | Target(s) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-21 | Upregulated | In vitro In vivo | U87 glioma cell lines Xenograft tumor | Inhibition of apoptosis | Destabilizing TNFRs and decreasing the molecules involved in apoptosis including caspase-3, caspase-9, and APAF1 | [ |
| miR-221/222 | Upregulated | In vitro In vivo | U251 glioblastoma/rat C6 glioma cells Xenograft tumor model (U251 glioma) | Induce proliferation of cell and disrupt cell death | Cell cycle inhibitors including p27 and/or p57 | [ |
| miR-34a | Downregulated | In vitro | MSCs-U87 U87-MG glioblastoma | Inhibition of glioma cell growth and cell cycle progression | Direct inhibition of expression of various cellular factors such as c-MET RTK, Notch-1, Notch-2, CDK6, CCND1, and SIRT1 | [ |
| miR-124-3p | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251 and U87 glioma cell lines/SHG44 glioblastoma cell line | Disrupt glioma cell proliferation, invasion, and migration | Connection with a variety of extracellular receptors such as NRP-1 | [ |
| miR-125b | Upregulated | In vitro | U343 and U251 glioma cells | Induction of glioma cell proliferation, as well as inhibiting ATRA-induced cell apoptosis | Interaction with the 3′-UTR of Bmf | [ |
| miR-9 | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U87 MG (CL-0238) and TG-905 (CL-0309) glioblastoma cell lines | Inhibition of glioma cells proliferation and increased apoptosis | FOXG1 signaling | [ |
| miR-186 | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U87 glioma/astrocyte HA1800 cell lines | Increasing apoptosis | Inhibition of Smad6 | [ |
| miR-142-3p | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251 and U87 cell lines | Inhibition of glioma cells proliferation and mitigates apoptosis | Inactivated Wnt/β-catenin signaling and activated caspase-3 signaling by targeting HMGB1 | [ |
| miR-25 | Upregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U-373MG Uppsala, U-87MG Uppsala, U251MG, and T98G glioma cell lines | Induction of tumor cell migration, invasiveness, and proliferation | Increasing expression of CADM2 | [ |
| miR-146b-5p | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U87MG/SNB19 cell lines | Inhibition of glioma cells migration and invasion | Degradation of MMP16-related mRNA | [ |
| miR-379-5p | Downregulated | In vitro | U87 and U251 glioma cell lines/human astrocyte normal cells/HEB cells | Inhibition of glioma cells viability, migration, invasion, and EMT | Modulation of MGST1 | [ |
| miR-665 | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251MG, A172, LN18, and T98G glioma cell lines | Inhibition of glioma cell proliferation, migration, and invasion | Targeting HMGB1, as well as inhibiting the Wnt/β-catenin pathway | [ |
miR-3175 miR-134 | Upregulated Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251 glioma cells | Affecting cell proliferation and apoptosis, as well as EMT | PI3K/Akt pathway | [ |
| miR-296 | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251 glioma cell line | Inhibition of cell invasion and multidrug resistance | Particular types of potassium channels such as EAG1 (also called KCNH1) | [ |
| miR-320a | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U87 and U251 human glioma cell lines | Impeding invasion and migration of glioma cells | Aquaporin 4 | [ |
| miR-125b | Downregulated | In vitro | Pediatric low-grade glioma-derived cell lines (Res186, Res259, and BT66) | A decrease in cell growth and induction of apoptosis | The mechanisms is not clear | [ |
| miR-125b | Downregulated | In vitro | Human brain microvascular endothelial cells | Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis | Molecular loop, which interacts with MAZ, VEGF, and miR-125b | [ |
| miR-210-3P | Upregulated | In vitro | U87-MG, A172, and HS683 glioma cell lines | Induction of invasiveness and EMT in glioma cells Probable involvement in regulation of mitochondrial function | Modification of the mitochondrial membrane potential to improve mitochondrial function | [ |
| miR-93 | Upregulated | Tissue samples | Induction of proliferation, cell cycle progression, colony formation, migration, invasion, and chemoresistance in glioma cells | Integrin β8 | [ | |
| miR-124-3p | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U87MG and U251MG cell lines | Inhibition of the proliferation, invasion, and migration of glioma cells | Activating the PI3K/Akt/NF-κB signaling pathway | [ |
| miR-21 | Upregulated | In vitro | U87MG glioma cell line | Inhibition of TMZ-induced apoptosis | Decreasing the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and caspase-3 activity | [ |
| miR-125b-2 | Upregulated | In vitro | Primary culture of glioblastoma tissues-derived cells | Induction of resistance of human glioblastoma stem cells to TMZ | Mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis | [ |
| miR-128 and miR-149 | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251 and U87 glioma cell line | Inhibition of invasion of glioblastoma cells Increasing the TMZ sensitivity of glioblastoma cells | Rap1B-mediated cytoskeletal and related molecular alterations | [ |
| miR-181a/b/c/d | Downregulated | In vitro | Tissue samples U251 and U87 glioma cell line | Increasing the TMZ sensitivity of glioblastoma cells Inhibition of invasive proliferation of glioblastoma cells | Rap1B-mediated cytoskeleton remodeling and related molecular (Cdc42, RhoA, and N-cadherin) changes | [ |
| miR-155-3p | Upregulated | In vitro In vivo | Tissue samples LN299, A172, T98, U87, and U251 glioma cell lines and healthy human astrocytes Xenograft mice model (U87) | Induction of cell growth, while its inhibition promotes TMZ sensitivity Induction of cell arrest at the same point that TMZ acts on G1/S phase | Upmodulation of Six1 at translational level | [ |
| miR-141-3p | Upregulated | In vitro In vivo | Tissue samples A172, U87, U251, T98, and LN229 glioma cell lines Xenograft mice model (U87) | Induction of cell growth and drug resistance Induction of tumor growth, as well as inhibition of cell apoptosis and cell cycle arrest | Suppression of p53 and its downstream proteins such as CDK2 and cyclin E1/B1, thus inhibiting cell cycle arrest at G1 to S phases | [ |
| miR-195 | Downregulated | In vitro | U251MG glioma cell line | Inhibition of miR-195-induced TMZ resistance and suppression of cell apoptosis of glioma cells | CCNE1 | [ |
miR-524-5p miR-324-5p | Downregulated | In vitro In vivo | Profiling upon 158 glioma samples U87 and U251 glioma cells Xenograft mice model (U87) | Upregulation of miR-524-5p and miR-324-5p reduces glioma cell proliferation, but increases TMZ sensitivity | EZH2 | [ |
| miR-137 | Downregulated | Tissue samples | Inhibition of GSC self-renewal, while promoting their differentiation | Targeting RTVP-1, which downregulates CXCR4 | [ | |
| miR-26a | Upregulated | In vitro In vivo | U251, U87, A172, and SHG44 glioma cell lines, human cervical cancer cell line HeLa, human embryonic kidney 293 and 293 T cells Xenograft mice model (U87) | Decreasing AP-2α expression by binding to the 3′-UTR of AP-2α and reversed the tumor-suppressive role of AP-2α in glioma | AP-2α/Nanog signaling axis | [ |
| miR-30a | Downregulated | In vitro In vivo | Tissue samples A172, U87, and U251 glioma cell lines Xenograft mice model | Suppression of self-renewal and tumorigenicity of GSCs Exerting some antitumor effects on GSCs | Blocking the NT5E-dependent Akt signaling pathway | [ |
| miR-30c | – | In vitro | Rat C6 glioma cell line | C6 cell sphere formation and neural differentiation to astrocytes | JAK–STAT signaling pathway | [ |
| miR-33a | Upregulated | In vivo | Tissue samples Xenograft mice model | Increasing the PDE8A and UVRAG mRNAs’ expression | Modulation of PKA and Notch endocytosis signaling pathways | [ |
| miR-300 | Upregulated | In vivo | Tissue samples Xenograft mice model | Increasing the cell proliferation and self-renewal-related activities in patient-derived GSCs | Direct suppression of LZTS2 | [ |
| miR-29a | Downregulated | In vitro In vivo | Tissue samples U87 and U251 glioma cell lines BALB/c nude mice | Suppression of proliferation, migration, and invasion, but promotion of glioma cell apoptosis | Aberrated expression of MDM2/4 and final deregulation of the activity of the p53-miR-29a-MDM2/4 feedback loop | [ |
Akt protein kinase B; APAF1 apoptotic protease activating factor 1; ATRA all-trans retinoic acid; Bax Bcl-2-associated X; Bcl-2 B cell lymphoma protein -2; Bmf Bcl-2 modifying factor; CADM2 cell adhesion molecule 2; CCND1 Cyclin D1; Cdc42 cell division cycle 42; CDK cyclin-dependent kinase; CXCR4 C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4; EAG1 Ether-à-go-go1 potassium channel; EMT epithelial–mesenchymal transition; EZH2 Enhancer of zeste 2 polycomb repressive complex 2 subunit; FOXG1 Forkhead box G1; HMGB1 high mobility group box 1; KCNH1 potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily H member 1; LZTS2 leucine-zipper tumor suppressor 2; MAZ MYC associated zinc finger protein; MDM2 mouse double minute 2; MGST1 microsomal glutathione S-transferase 1; MMP16 matrix metalloproteinase 16; MSCs mesenchymal stem cells; NF-κB nuclear factor-κB; NRP neuropilin; NT5E 5′-nucleotidase ecto; PDE8A phosphodiesterase 8A; PI3K phosphoinositide 3-kinase; Rap1B Ras-associated protein 1B; RhoA Ras homolog family member A; RTK receptor tyrosine kinase; SIRT1 Sirtuin1; Six1 sine oculis homeobox 1; TMZ temozolomide; TNFRs tumor necrosis factor receptors; UTR untranslated region; UVRAG UV radiation resistance-associated gene; VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor
Fig. 1Processing of miRNAs, from biogenesis to therapeutic strategies. miRNAs are transcribed from particular genes inside the nucleus through the action of RNA polymerase II. After the formation of pri-miRNA, this is developed to pre-miRNA by the Drosha–DGCR complex. Then, the pre-miRNA leaves the nucleus for the cytoplasm via exportin 5. Following particular cytoplasmic processing and the action of the Dicer–TRBP complex, pre-miRNA is converted into duplex miRNA, which then undergoes an unwinding to produce mature miRNA. Mature miRNA, using the Ago-2 protein, forms a complex with RISC to cleave the mRNA of interest, or suppresses the translation process. In the case of therapeutic strategies attributed to miRNAs, there are four distinct strategies: A AntagomiRs that bind to and inhibit the action of oncomiRs by blocking miRNA-to-mRNA attachment, through a process called antisense action. AntagomiRs are also responsible for further degradation of miRNAs; B miRNA mimics, which help anticarcinogenic miRNAs to induce tumor-suppressive activities by reversing the epigenetic silencing; C miRNA masks that prevent miRNAs from acting on mRNAs by masking the 3′-UTR sequence on the mRNA strand; D miRNA sponges, whose behavior prevents miRNAs from acting on mRNAs by occupying the binding sites of a particular miRNA or even a set of miRNAs with similar seed sequences by a complementary RNA sequence. Ago2 Argonaute RISC catalytic component 2; DGCR DiGeorge syndrome critical region; GTP guanosine triphosphate; RISC RNA-induced silencing complex; RNA poly RNA polymerase; TRBP TAR RNA binding protein
Fig. 2Schematic view of the relationship between miRNAs and the glioma progression