研究人员发现,一种名为miR-9的小RNA(miRNA)控制着乳腺肿瘤的扩散和发展,新成果发表在2月在线出版的《自然—细胞生物学》期刊上。新发现认为,未来miR-9也许可以成为治疗乳腺癌的潜在靶标。
以前的研究指出,小RNA或者会激活肿瘤,或者会抑制肿瘤的扩散。Robert Weinberg和同事发现,在小鼠体内,通过调节黏附蛋白质E-cadherin,由致癌基因Myc直接控制的miR-9会让小鼠体内的乳腺细胞具有侵入性。miR-9也增强了血管的生长,从而增加了肿瘤的血液供应。因为在患恶性乳腺癌患者的初期,其miR-9的水平在升高,因此,这一通道对人类来说可能也至关重要。
在本期一篇相关的新闻评论中,Greg Goodall讨论了miR-9对其他类型肿瘤的重要性,包括神经母细胞瘤,以及它在正常发育过程中的作用。(生物谷Bioon.com)
更多乳腺癌研究:
Nature Medicine:乳腺癌治疗药物阻抑基因
Cell:不同乳腺癌干细胞分子特征对肿瘤发展趋势的影响
Nature:与乳腺癌肿瘤形成和转移有关的两种miRNA
Cancer Research:二甲双胍可抑制乳腺癌扩散
Cell:发现乳腺癌新型药物靶标
生物谷推荐原始出处:
Nature Cell Biology 21 February 2010 | doi:10.1038/ncb2024
miR-9, a MYC/MYCN-activated microRNA, regulates E-cadherin and cancer metastasis
Li Ma1,2, Jennifer Young1,7, Harsha Prabhala3,7, Elizabeth Pan1, Pieter Mestdagh4, Daniel Muth5, Julie Teruya-Feldstein6, Ferenc Reinhardt1, Tamer T. Onder1,2, Scott Valastyan1,2, Frank Westermann5, Frank Speleman4, Jo Vandesompele4 & Robert A. Weinberg1,2
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are increasingly implicated in regulating the malignant progression of cancer. Here we show that miR-9, which is upregulated in breast cancer cells, directly targets CDH1, the E-cadherin-encoding messenger RNA, leading to increased cell motility and invasiveness. miR-9-mediated E-cadherin downregulation results in the activation of β-catenin signalling, which contributes to upregulated expression of the gene encoding vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF); this leads, in turn, to increased tumour angiogenesis. Overexpression of miR-9 in otherwise non-metastatic breast tumour cells enables these cells to form pulmonary micrometastases in mice. Conversely, inhibiting miR-9 by using a 'miRNA sponge' in highly malignant cells inhibits metastasis formation. Expression of miR-9 is activated by MYC and MYCN, both of which directly bind to the mir-9-3 locus. Significantly, in human cancers, miR-9 levels correlate with MYCN amplification, tumour grade and metastatic status. These findings uncover a regulatory and signalling pathway involving a metastasis-promoting miRNA that is predicted to directly target expression of the key metastasis-suppressing protein E-cadherin.
1 Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA.
2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA.
3 Medical Scientist Training Program, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908, USA
4 Center for Medical Genetics, Ghent University Hospital, 9000 Ghent, Belgium.
5 Department of Tumor Genetics, German Cancer Center, Im Neuenheimer Feld 280, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
6 Department of Pathology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10021, USA.
7 These authors contributed equally to this work.