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Breast Cancer Chemoresistance: Insights into the Regulatory Role of lncRNA

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms242115897

Keywords

breast cancer; chemoresistance; long noncoding RNA; metabolism

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This review highlights the importance of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) in breast cancer chemoresistance. LncRNAs regulate multiple pathways involved in breast cancer development and treatment response. Understanding these mechanisms in detail may improve the clinical outcomes for breast cancer patients.
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are a subclass of noncoding RNAs composed of more than 200 nucleotides without the ability to encode functional proteins. Given their involvement in critical cellular processes such as gene expression regulation, transcription, and translation, lncRNAs play a significant role in organism homeostasis. Breast cancer (BC) is the second most common cancer worldwide and evidence has shown a relationship between aberrant lncRNA expression and BC development. One of the main obstacles in BC control is multidrug chemoresistance, which is associated with the deregulation of multiple mechanisms such as efflux transporter activity, mitochondrial metabolism reprogramming, and epigenetic regulation as well as apoptosis and autophagy. Studies have shown the involvement of a large number of lncRNAs in the regulation of such pathways. However, the underlying mechanism is not clearly elucidated. In this review, we present the principal mechanisms associated with BC chemoresistance that can be directly or indirectly regulated by lncRNA, highlighting the importance of lncRNA in controlling BC chemoresistance. Understanding these mechanisms in deep detail may interest the clinical outcome of BC patients and could be used as therapeutic targets to overcome BC therapy resistance.

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