Journal ArticleDOI
MicroRNA in prostate, bladder, and kidney cancer: a systematic review.
James W.F. Catto,Antonio Alcaraz,Anders Bjartell,Ralph W deVere White,Christopher P. Evans,Susanne Füssel,Freddie C. Hamdy,Olli Kallioniemi,Lourdes Mengual,Thorsten Schlomm,Tapio Visakorpi +10 more
TLDR
MiRNAs appear to be important modulators of urologic cancer, and many are functionally implicated in their pathogenesis.About:
This article is published in European Urology.The article was published on 2011-05-01. It has received 448 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Cancer & Gene silencing.read more
Citations
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High-dimension to high-dimension screening for detecting genome-wide epigenetic and noncoding RNA regulators of gene expression
TL;DR: This work proposes a novel screening method based on robust partial correlation to detect epigenetic and noncoding RNA regulators of gene expression over the whole genome, which reduces the dimension of both predictor and response and screens at both node and edge levels.
Journal ArticleDOI
Identification of MicroRNAs Targeting mTOR Gene Transcripts in Skin, Lung, Kidney, Uterus and Breast Cancer
TL;DR: The study shows that in the cancer patient, mTOR tends to support cancer growth despite miRNA targeting it has low correlation rho value.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Risks and Benefits of Current Treatment Options for Prostate Cancer and Future Possibilities in Advanced Imaging and Targeted Therapy: A Review
Emma Huebner,Al Barqawi +1 more
TL;DR: Overdiagnosis can be defined as the detection of prostate cancer during screening that would not have been clinically diagnosed throughout a man’s lifetime in the absence of screening.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
MicroRNAs: Target Recognition and Regulatory Functions
TL;DR: The current understanding of miRNA target recognition in animals is outlined and the widespread impact of miRNAs on both the expression and evolution of protein-coding genes is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Circulating microRNAs as stable blood-based markers for cancer detection
Patrick S. Mitchell,Rachael K. Parkin,Evan M. Kroh,Brian R. Fritz,Brian R. Fritz,Stacia K. Wyman,Era L. Pogosova-Agadjanyan,Amelia Peterson,Jennifer Noteboom,Kathy O'Briant,April Allen,Daniel W. Lin,Daniel W. Lin,Daniel W. Lin,Nicole Urban,Charles W. Drescher,Beatrice S. Knudsen,Derek L. Stirewalt,Robert Gentleman,Robert L. Vessella,Robert L. Vessella,Peter S. Nelson,Daniel Martin,Daniel Martin,Muneesh Tewari +24 more
TL;DR: It is shown here that miRNAs are present in human plasma in a remarkably stable form that is protected from endogenous RNase activity and established the measurement of tumor-derived mi RNAs in serum or plasma as an important approach for the blood-based detection of human cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI
A microRNA polycistron as a potential human oncogene
Lin He,J. Michael Thomson,Michael T. Hemann,Eva Hernando-Monge,David Mu,Summer G. Goodson,Scott Powers,Carlos Cordon-Cardo,Scott W. Lowe,Gregory J. Hannon,Scott M. Hammond +10 more
TL;DR: It is found that the levels of the primary or mature microRNAs derived from the mir-17–92 locus are often substantially increased in human B-cell lymphomas, and the cluster is implicate as a potential human oncogene.
Mammalian microRNAs predominantly act to decrease target mRNA levels
Huili Guo,Nicholas T. Ingolia,Nicholas T. Ingolia,Jonathan S. Weissman,Jonathan S. Weissman,David P. Bartel +5 more
TL;DR: Results show that changes in mRNA levels closely reflect the impact of miRNAs on gene expression and indicate that destabilization of target mRNAs is the predominant reason for reduced protein output.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mammalian microRNAs predominantly act to decrease target mRNA levels
Huili Guo,Nicholas T. Ingolia,Nicholas T. Ingolia,Jonathan S. Weissman,Jonathan S. Weissman,David P. Bartel +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used ribosome profiling to measure the overall effects on protein production and compare these to simultaneously measured effects on mRNA levels, showing that changes in mRNA levels closely reflect the impact of miRNAs on gene expression and indicate that destabilization of target mRNAs is the predominant reason for reduced protein output.
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Circulating microRNAs as stable blood-based markers for cancer detection
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