4.3 Article

miR-93 Promotes Cell Proliferation in Gliomas through Activation of PI3K/Akt Signaling Pathway

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 8286-8299

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.3221

Keywords

PI3K/Akt; miR-93; gliomas

Funding

  1. National Natural Scientific Foundation of China [81101680, 81325013, 81225018, 91229101, U1201121, 81272196, 81171892, 81272198, 81401965]
  2. Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province, China [2013B021800096, S2012020010946]
  3. Guangzhou scholars research projects of Guangzhou municipal colleges and universities [12A009D]
  4. Pearl River projects (Young Talents of Science and Technology) in Guangzhou [2013J2200028]
  5. State Key Laboratory of Oncology in Southern China [HN2013-04]

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The PI3K/Akt signaling pathway is frequently activated in various human cancer types and plays essential roles in development and progression of cancers. Multiple regulators, such as phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) and PH domain leucine rich repeat protein phosphatases (PHLPP), have also found to be involved in suppression of the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway. However, how suppressive effects mediated by these regulators are concomitantly disrupted in cancers, which display constitutively activated PI3K/Akt signaling, remains puzzling. In the present study, we reported that the expression of miR-93 was markedly upregulated in glioma cell lines and clinical glioma tissues. Statistical analysis revealed that miR-93 levels significantly correlated with clinicopathologic grade and overall survival in gliomas. Furthermore, we found that overexpressing miR-93 promoted, but inhibition of miR93 reduced, glioma cell proliferation and cell-cycle progression. We demonstrated that miR-93 activated PI3K/Akt signaling through directly suppressing PTEN, PHLPP2 and FOXO3 expression via targeting their 3' UTRs. Therefore, our results suggest that miR-93 might play an important role in glioma progression and uncover a novel mechanism for constitutive PI3K/Akt activation in gliomas.

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