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miRNA profiling in colorectal cancer highlights miR-1 involvement in MET-dependent proliferation
Authors:Reid James F  Sokolova Viktorija  Zoni Eugenio  Lampis Andrea  Pizzamiglio Sara  Bertan Claudia  Zanutto Susanna  Perrone Federica  Camerini Tiziana  Gallino Gianfrancesco  Verderio Paolo  Leo Ermanno  Pilotti Silvana  Gariboldi Manuela  Pierotti Marco A
Affiliation:Departments of Experimental Oncology and Molecular Medicine, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan 20133, Italy.
Abstract:Altered expression of miRNAs is associated with development and progression of various human cancers by regulating the translation of oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. In colorectal cancer, these regulators complement the Vogelstein multistep model of pathogenesis and have the potential of becoming a novel class of tumor biomarkers and therapeutic targets. Using quantitative real-time PCR, we measured the expression of 621 mature miRNAs in 40 colorectal cancers and their paired normal tissues and identified 23 significantly deregulated miRNAs. We subsequently evaluated their association with clinical characteristics of the samples and presence of alterations in the molecular markers of colorectal cancer progression. Expression levels of miR-31 were correlated with CA19-9 and miR-18a, miR-21, and miR-31 were associated with mutations in APC gene. To investigate the downstream regulation of the differentially expressed miRNAs identified, we integrated putative mRNA target predictions with the results of a meta-analysis of seven public gene expression datasets of normal and tumor samples of colorectal cancer patients. Many of the colorectal cancer deregulated miRNAs computationally mapped to targets involved in pathways related to progression. Here one promising candidate pair (miR-1 and MET) was studied and functionally validated. We show that miR-1 can have a tumor suppressor function in colorectal cancer by directly downregulating MET oncogene both at RNA and protein level and that reexpression of miR-1 leads to MET-driven reduction of cell proliferation and motility, identifying the miR-1 downmodulation as one of the events that could enhance colorectal cancer progression.
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