4.7 Review

Regulation of autophagy by microRNAs in human breast cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12929-021-00715-9

Keywords

Breast cancer; miRNAs; Autophagy; Biomarkers; Therapeutic agents

Funding

  1. FRGS grant by Ministry of Higher Education, Malaysia [FRGS/1/2018/STG05/UNIM/02/1, FRGS/1/2014/SG05/UNIM/02/1]

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This review discusses the roles of miRNAs in regulating autophagy in breast cancer, and how this can influence disease progression and treatment response. MiRNAs can modulate autophagy activity, affecting proliferation and cell death in human breast cancer cells. Utilizing miRNAs as biomarkers and therapeutic targets may be a promising direction for future breast cancer treatment.
Breast cancer is the most common solid cancer that affects female population globally. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short non-coding RNAs that can regulate post-transcriptional modification of multiple downstream genes. Autophagy is a conserved cellular catabolic activity that aims to provide nutrients and degrade un-usable macromolecules in mammalian cells. A number of in vitro, in vivo and clinical studies have reported that some miRNAs could modulate autophagy activity in human breast cancer cells, and these would influence human breast cancer progression and treatment response. Therefore, this review was aimed to discuss the roles of autophagy-regulating miRNAs in influencing breast cancer development and treatment response. The review would first introduce autophagy types and process, followed by the discussion of the roles of different miRNAs in modulating autophagy in human breast cancer, and to explore how would this miRNA-autophagy regulatory process affect the disease progression or treatment response. Lastly, the potential applications and challenges of utilizing autophagy-regulating miRNAs as breast cancer biomarkers and novel therapeutic agents would be discussed.

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