4.3 Article

MiR-3663-3p Inhibits the Progression of Gastric Cancer Through the CCND1 Pathway

Journal

ANTICANCER RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 5, Pages 2441-2449

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/anticanres.15019

Keywords

Words; Gastric cancer; miR-3663-3p; CCND1; biomarker

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miR-3663-3p is significantly downregulated in gastric cancer and is associated with lower recurrence-free survival in patients. Overexpression of miR-3663-3p suppresses cell proliferation, migration/invasion, and induces cell cycle arrest through downregulating Cyclin D1 and reducing Rb phosphorylation.
Background/Aim: The regulation of gene expression by miRNAs plays an important role in cancer progression. Here, we investigated the role of miR-3663-3p in gastric cancer. Patients and Methods: The relationship between miR-3663-3p expression, clinicopathological features and prognosis were retrospectively analyzed in 80 gastric cancer patients. Results: miR-3663-3p expression was significantly lower in gastric cancer tissue than adjacent non-cancerous tissue (p=0.002). Recurrence free survival was significantly lower in patients with low miR-3663-3p expression (p=0.016). Low miR-3663-3p expression was also an independent predictive factor for recurrence (p=0.029). Overexpression of miR-3663-3p in gastric cancer cell lines significantly suppressed cell proliferation, migration/ invasion, and induced G0/G1 arrest (p<0.01). Furthermore, overexpression of miR-3663-3p decreased Cyclin D1 mRNA and protein, and reduced the phosphorylation of Retinoblastoma (Rb) protein. Conclusion: miR-3663-3p is a clinically useful predictor of gastric cancer recurrence. It exhibits tumor suppressive features through limited entry into the cell cycle in a Cyclin D1-Rb dependent manner.

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