TY - JOUR
T1 - MicroRNA-497 impairs the growth of chemoresistant neuroblastoma cells by targeting cell cycle, survival and vascular permeability genes
AU - Soriano, Aroa
AU - París-Coderch, Laia
AU - Jubierre, Luz
AU - Martínez, Alba
AU - Zhou, Xiangyu
AU - Piskareva, Olga
AU - Bray, Isabella
AU - Vidal, Isaac
AU - Almazán-Moga, Ana
AU - Molist, Carla
AU - Roma, Josep
AU - Bayascas, José R.
AU - Casanovas, Oriol
AU - Stallings, Raymond L.
AU - de Toledo, José Sánchez
AU - Gallego, Soledad
AU - Segura, Miguel F.
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - Despite multimodal therapies, a high percentage of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) become refractory to current treatments, most of which interfere with cell cycle and DNA synthesis or function, activating the DNA damage response (DDR). In cancer, this process is frequently altered by deregulated expression or function of several genes which contribute to multidrug resistance (MDR). MicroRNAs are outstanding candidates for therapy since a single microRNA can modulate the expression of multiple genes of the same or different pathways, thus hindering the development of resistance mechanisms by the tumor. We found several genes implicated in the MDR to be overexpressed in high-risk NB which could be targeted by microRNAs simultaneously. Our functional screening identified several of those microRNAs that reduced proliferation of chemoresistant NB cell lines, the best of which was miR-497. Low expression of miR-497 correlated with poor patient outcome. The overexpression of miR-497 reduced the proliferation of multiple chemoresistant NB cell lines and induced apoptosis in MYCN-amplified cell lines. Moreover, the conditional expression of miR-497 in NB xenografts reduced tumor growth and inhibited vascular permeabilization. MiR-497 targets multiple genes related to the DDR, cell cycle, survival and angiogenesis, which renders this molecule a promising candidate for NB therapy.
AB - Despite multimodal therapies, a high percentage of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) become refractory to current treatments, most of which interfere with cell cycle and DNA synthesis or function, activating the DNA damage response (DDR). In cancer, this process is frequently altered by deregulated expression or function of several genes which contribute to multidrug resistance (MDR). MicroRNAs are outstanding candidates for therapy since a single microRNA can modulate the expression of multiple genes of the same or different pathways, thus hindering the development of resistance mechanisms by the tumor. We found several genes implicated in the MDR to be overexpressed in high-risk NB which could be targeted by microRNAs simultaneously. Our functional screening identified several of those microRNAs that reduced proliferation of chemoresistant NB cell lines, the best of which was miR-497. Low expression of miR-497 correlated with poor patient outcome. The overexpression of miR-497 reduced the proliferation of multiple chemoresistant NB cell lines and induced apoptosis in MYCN-amplified cell lines. Moreover, the conditional expression of miR-497 in NB xenografts reduced tumor growth and inhibited vascular permeabilization. MiR-497 targets multiple genes related to the DDR, cell cycle, survival and angiogenesis, which renders this molecule a promising candidate for NB therapy.
KW - Epigenetic therapy
KW - MicroRNA
KW - Neuroblastoma
KW - Vascular permeability
UR - https://ddd.uab.cat/record/185779
U2 - https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.7005
DO - https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.7005
M3 - Article
VL - 7
SP - 9271
EP - 9287
JO - Oncotarget
JF - Oncotarget
SN - 1949-2553
ER -