4.6 Review

The miR-200 Family of microRNAs: Fine Tuners of Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition and Circulating Cancer Biomarkers

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13235874

Keywords

microRNAs; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; epithelial cancers; liquid biopsy

Categories

Funding

  1. Veneto Institute of Oncology IOV-IRCCS [5X1000, P16-PROBE, P2-mEDIA]
  2. University of Padova [BIRD 204551/20]

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MicroRNAs of the miR-200 family play crucial roles in regulating gene expression in cancer cells, potentially serving as biomarkers for cancer detection. The mature miR-200 family microRNAs are abundantly expressed in epithelial cells, contributing to maintaining the epithelial phenotype and inhibiting cancer development. These microRNAs exhibit both tumor suppressor and pro-metastatic functions, showing promise as biomarkers for epithelial cancers.
Simple Summary MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small RNA molecules that regulate gene expression by blocking translation or inducing degradation of specific gene transcripts. The miR-200 family controls the expression of many genes that play important roles in cancer cells. One of the main pathways controlled by these miRNAs, termed epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), is an essential component of the invasive growth program of solid tumors. The miR-200 family has thus been the focus of many studies aimed at discovering strategies to block cancer cell growth and disease progression. In addition, the miR-200 family miRNAs have been investigated as possible circulating cancer biomarkers. Here we provide an overview of factors that influence miR-200 family expression and target genes relevant to tumor development, followed by a summary of their potential utility as noninvasive biomarkers for selected cancers. The miR-200 family of microRNAs (miRNAs) includes miR-200a, miR-200b, miR-200c, miR-141 and miR-429, five evolutionarily conserved miRNAs that are encoded in two clusters of hairpin precursors located on human chromosome 1 (miR-200b, miR-200a and miR-429) and chromosome 12 (miR-200c and miR-141). The mature -3p products of the precursors are abundantly expressed in epithelial cells, where they contribute to maintaining the epithelial phenotype by repressing expression of factors that favor the process of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a key hallmark of oncogenic transformation. Extensive studies of the expression and interactions of these miRNAs with cell signaling pathways indicate that they can exert both tumor suppressor- and pro-metastatic functions, and may serve as biomarkers of epithelial cancers. This review provides a summary of the role of miR-200 family members in EMT, factors that regulate their expression, and important targets for miR-200-mediated repression that are involved in EMT. The second part of the review discusses the potential utility of circulating miR-200 family members as diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers for breast, colorectal, lung, ovarian, prostate and bladder cancers.

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