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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

miR-145, miR-133a and miR-133b: Tumor-suppressive miRNAs target FSCN1 in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

TLDR
The identification of tumor‐suppressive miRNAs,miR‐145, miR‐133a and miR-133b, directly control oncogenic FSCN1 gene, and could provide new insights into potential mechanisms of ESCC carcinogenesis.
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs), noncoding RNAs 21–25 nucleotides in length, regulate gene expression primarily at the posttranscriptional level. Growing evidence suggests that miRNAs are aberrantly expressed in many human cancers, and that they play significant roles in carcinogenesis and cancer progression. A search for miRNAs with a tumor-suppressive function in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) was performed using the miRNA expression signatures obtained from ESCC clinical specimens. A subset of 15 miRNAs was significantly downregulated in ESCC. A comparison of miRNA signatures from ESCC and our previous report identified 4 miRNAs that are downregulated in common (miR-145, miR-30a-3p, miR-133a and miR-133b), suggesting that these miRNAs are candidate tumor suppressors. Gain-of-function analysis revealed that 3 transfectants (miR-145, miR-133a and miR-133b) inhibit cell proliferation and cell invasion in ESCC cells. These miRNAs (miR-145, miR-133a and miR-133b), which have conserved sequences in the 3′UTR of FSCN1 (actin-binding protein, Fascin homolog 1), inhibited FSCN1 expression. The signal from a luciferase reporter assay was significantly decreased at 2 miR-145 target sites and 1 miR-133a/b site, suggesting both miRNAs directly regulate FSCN1. An FSCN1 loss-of-function assay found significant cell growth and invasion inhibition, implying an FSCN1 is associated with ESCC carcinogenesis. The identification of tumor-suppressive miRNAs, miR-145, miR-133a and miR-133b, directly control oncogenic FSCN1 gene. These signal pathways of ESCC could provide new insights into potential mechanisms of ESCC carcinogenesis.

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Citations
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Identifying Potential miRNAs-Disease Associations With Probability Matrix Factorization.

TL;DR: PMFMDA achieves reliable performance in the frameworks of global leave-one-out cross validation and 5-fold cross validation in the HMDD (V2.0) dataset, significantly outperforming a few state-of-the-art methods including CMFMDA, IMCMDA, NCPMDA, RLSMDA, and RWRMDA.
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miR-133b acts as a tumor suppressor and negatively regulates ATP citrate lyase via PPARγ in gastric cancer.

TL;DR: Results indicate that miR-133b targets ACLY and inhibits GC cell proliferation by regulating the expression of PPARγ, suggesting that mi R-133B may serve as a tumor-suppressive target in GC therapy.
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Fascin is a predictor for invasiveness and recurrence of urothelial carcinoma of bladder

TL;DR: Finn expression was up-regulated in bladder urothelial carcinoma, and may be used as a prognostic marker and a new target for the treatment of bladder Urothelia carcinoma.
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Procaine Inhibits Proliferation and Migration and Promotes Cell Apoptosis in Osteosarcoma Cells by Upregulation of MicroRNA-133b.

TL;DR: The results suggest that PCA inhibits proliferation and migration but promotes apoptosis in osteosarcoma cells by upregulation of miR-133b, which may be achieved by inactivation of the AKT/ERK pathways.
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Construction of an oesophageal cancer-specific ceRNA network based on miRNA, lncRNA, and mRNA expression data.

TL;DR: A novel perspective on potential oesophageal cancer mechanisms as well as novel pathways for modulating ceRNA networks for treating cancers are suggested.
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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.
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Journal Article

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MicroRNAs: small RNAs with a big role in gene regulation

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Journal Article

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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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