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MicroRNAs as Modulators of Oral Tumorigenesis-A Focused Review

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22052561

Keywords

oral cancers; miRNAs; non-coding RNAs; invasion; apoptosis; metastasis

Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Government of India [BT/BI/14/042/2017]
  2. Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 2 [MOE-000071-00]
  3. National Medical Research Council of Singapore
  4. Singapore Ministry of Education under its Research Centre of Excellence initiative

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Oral cancers have a high incidence and low survival rate in developing countries, highlighting the need for further research on their etiology, diagnosis, and treatment. MicroRNAs have been associated with various human diseases, including oral cancers, and could serve as potential candidates for functional markers to aid in differential diagnosis, prognosis, and development of novel therapeutic regimens.
Oral cancers constitute the majority of head and neck tumors, with a relatively high incidence and poor survival rate in developing countries. While the five-year survival rates of the oral cancer patients have increased to 65%, the overall survival for advanced stages has been at 27% for the past ten years, emphasizing the necessity for further understanding the etiology of the disease, diagnosis, and formulating possible novel treatment regimens. MicroRNAs (miRNAs), a family of small non-coding RNA, have emerged as master modulators of gene expression in various cellular and biological process. Aberrant expression of these dynamic molecules has been associated with many human diseases, including oral cancers. The deregulated miRNAs have been shown to control various oncogenic processes, including sustaining proliferative signaling, evading growth suppressors, resisting cell death activating invasion and metastasis, and inducing angiogenesis. Hence, the aberrant expression of miRNAs associated with oral cancers, makes them potential candidates for the investigation of functional markers, which will aid in the differential diagnosis, prognosis, and development of novel therapeutic regimens. This review presents a holistic insight into our understanding of the role of miRNAs in regulating various hallmarks of oral tumorigenesis.

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