4.7 Article

Cellular and Molecular Profiling of Tumor Microenvironment and Early-Stage Lung Cancer

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23105346

Keywords

early-stage lung cancer; tumor microenvironment; p53; E-cadherin; CD4; CD8; hsa-miR-25-3p; hsa-miR-29b-3p; hsa-miR-181a-5p; hsa-miR-205-5p

Funding

  1. Fulbright Program

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There are two categories of lung cancers: non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) and small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). Recent research has identified new potential biomarkers for early-stage lung cancer, including non-coding RNAs called microRNAs (miRNAs).
Lung cancers are broadly divided into two categories: non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), which accounts for 80-85% of all cancer cases, and small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC), which covers the remaining 10-15%. Recent advances in cancer biology and genomics research have allowed an in-depth characterization of lung cancers that have revealed new therapy targets (EGFR, ALK, ROS, and KRAS mutations) and have the potential of revealing even more biomarkers for diagnostic, prognostic, and targeted therapies. A new source of biomarkers is represented by non-coding RNAs, especially microRNAs (miRNAs). MiRNAs are short non-coding RNA sequences that have essential regulatory roles in multiple cancers. Therefore, we aim to investigate the tumor microenvironment (TME) and miRNA tumor profile in a subset of 51 early-stage lung cancer samples (T1 and T2) to better understand early tumor and TME organization and molecular dysregulation. We analyzed the immunohistochemistry expression of CD4 and CD8 as markers of the main TME immune populations, E-cadherin to evaluate early-stage epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and p53, the main altered tumor suppressor gene in lung cancer. Starting from these 4 markers, we identified and validated 4 miRNAs that target TP53 and regulate EMT that can be further investigated as potential early-stage lung cancer biomarkers.

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