4.7 Article

FOXM1-induced miR-552 expression contributes to pancreatic cancer progression by targeting multiple tumor suppressor genes

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages 915-925

Publisher

IVYSPRING INT PUBL
DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.56733

Keywords

FOXM1; miR-552; pancreatic cancer; migration

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81772567, 81772568]
  2. Key Disciplines Group Construction Project of Pudong Health Bureau of Shanghai [PWZxq201713]
  3. Outstanding Clinical Discipline Project of Shanghai Pudong [PWYgy201802]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study revealed that FOXM1 activates miR-552 to promote pancreatic cancer progression and cell migration. Additionally, miR-552 also influences pancreatic cancer development by downregulating tumor suppressor genes like DACH1, PCDH10, and SMAD4.
Dysregulation of microRNAs (miRNAs) plays important roles during carcinogenesis. Forkhead box M1 (FOXM1), a well-known oncogenic transcription factor, has been implicated in the progression of multiple cancer types. To find out FOXM1-induced abnormal miRNAs in pancreatic cancer, we analyzed TCGA database and figured out miR-552 as the most relevant miRNA with FOXM1. Molecular experimental results demonstrated that FOXM1 transcriptionally activated miR-552 expression by directly binding to the promoter region of miR-552. In a pancreatic cancer tissue microarray, miR-552 expression was positively correlated with FOXM1 and high expression of miR-552 could predict poor patient outcome. Functionally, overexpression of miR-552 promoted pancreatic cancer cell migration and inhibition of miR-552 attenuated this phenotype. The inhibitory effect on cell migration caused by FOXM1 knockdown could be restored by exogenous expression of miR-552. By informatics analysis, we identified three tumor suppressor genes: DACH1, PCDH10 and SMAD4, all of which were negatively associated with FOXM1 and validated as functionally relevant targets of miR-552. Taken together, our findings provide a new FOXM1-miR-552-DACH1/PCDH10/SMAD4 axis to regulate pancreatic cancer cell progression and new opportunities for therapeutic intervention against this

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available