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A reciprocal repression between ZEB1 and members of the miR-200 family promotes EMT and invasion in cancer cells

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TLDR
Results indicate that ZEB1 triggers an microRNA‐mediated feedforward loop that stabilizes EMT and promotes invasion of cancer cells, and thus explain the strong intratumorous heterogeneity observed in many human cancers.
Abstract
The embryonic programme 'epithelial-mesenchymal transition' (EMT) is thought to promote malignant tumour progression. The transcriptional repressor zinc-finger E-box binding homeobox 1 (ZEB1) is a crucial inducer of EMT in various human tumours, and was recently shown to promote invasion and metastasis of tumour cells. Here, we report that ZEB1 directly suppresses transcription of microRNA-200 family members miR-141 and miR-200c, which strongly activate epithelial differentiation in pancreatic, colorectal and breast cancer cells. Notably, the EMT activators transforming growth factor beta2 and ZEB1 are the predominant targets downregulated by these microRNAs. These results indicate that ZEB1 triggers an microRNA-mediated feedforward loop that stabilizes EMT and promotes invasion of cancer cells. Alternatively, depending on the environmental trigger, this loop might switch and induce epithelial differentiation, and thus explain the strong intratumorous heterogeneity observed in many human cancers.

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MicroRNAs as growth regulators, their function and biomarker status in colorectal cancer

TL;DR: This review summarizes the current knowledge of miRNAs in colorectal cancer (CRC) and discusses how these regulatory nodes interconnect and affect signaling pathways in CRC progression.
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Regulation of Colorectal Carcinoma Stemness, Growth, and Metastasis by an miR-200c-Sox2–Negative Feedback Loop Mechanism

TL;DR: The findings indicate that miR-200c regulates Sox2 expression through a feedback loop and is associated with CRC stemness, growth, and metastasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

MicroRNA in pancreatic cancer: Pathological, diagnostic and therapeutic implications

TL;DR: The current status of miRNA in pancreatic cancer development, progression, diagnosis, and therapy is discussed.
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Regulation of cancer metastasis by cell-free miRNAs

TL;DR: Establishing miRNA expression in the circulation likely has advantages over determination in primary tumor tissue, further augmenting the potential applications of miRNA detection in oncological practice.
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Hypoxia, partial EMT and collective migration: Emerging culprits in metastasis.

TL;DR: Mechanisms and implications of hybrid E/M phenotypes, including their reported association with hypoxia, and how metastasis is influenced by hypoxIA, partial EMT and collective cell migration are discussed, and a better understanding of interconnections among these mechanisms is called for.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

MicroRNAs: Genomics, Biogenesis, Mechanism, and Function

TL;DR: Although they escaped notice until relatively recently, miRNAs comprise one of the more abundant classes of gene regulatory molecules in multicellular organisms and likely influence the output of many protein-coding genes.
Journal Article

Oncomirs : microRNAs with a role in cancer

TL;DR: I MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are an abundant class of small non-protein-coding RNAs that function as negative gene regulators as discussed by the authors, and have been shown to repress the expression of important cancer-related genes and might prove useful in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.
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Prediction of Mammalian MicroRNA Targets

TL;DR: The predicted regulatory targets of mammalian miRNAs were enriched for genes involved in transcriptional regulation but also encompassed an unexpectedly broad range of other functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Complex networks orchestrate epithelial–mesenchymal transitions

TL;DR: Understanding how mesenchymal cells arise from an epithelial default status will also have a strong impact in unravelling the mechanisms that control fibrosis and cancer progression.
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