4.6 Article

MicroRNA-182 plays an onco-miRNA role in cervical cancer

Journal

GYNECOLOGIC ONCOLOGY
Volume 129, Issue 1, Pages 199-208

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2012.12.043

Keywords

Cervical cancer; MicroRNA-182; Gene expression analysis; FOXO1

Funding

  1. Basic Research for Shenzhen Municipal Science and Technology Programme [JCYJ20120619153045369]
  2. Chinese University of Hong Kong [2041707]

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Objectives. The purposes of this study were to identify aberrantly expressed miRNAs and investigate their pathogenic roles in cervical cancer. Methods. miRNA expression was assessed in cervical cancer cell lines, micro-dissected normal cervical epithelium cells and primary cervical carcinoma by TaqMan RT-PCR. Spatial expression of miR-182 in cervical carcinoma and normal cervix was explored by in situ hybridization. HeLa xenograft mice model was used for evaluation of the effect on tumor growth of miR-182 inhibitor. Western blot, flow cytometry and gene expression analysis were used for identification of the functional role of miR-182 in HeLa cells. Results. Two up-regulated (miR-182 and - 183) and nine down-regulated (miR-211, 145, 223, 150, 142-5p, 328, 195, 199b, 142-3p) microRNAs were consistently identified in cervical cancer cell lines. Further investigation confirmed the most up-regulated miRNA (miR-182) was significantly elevated in primary cervical carcinoma and discovered a significant correlation between the increased expression of miR-182 and advanced stages of cervical cancer. In HeLa xenograft mouse model, we demonstrated that inhibition of the miR-182 could exert the effect of tumor growth regression. Western blot, flow cytometry and pathway analysis for the HeLa cells with miR-182 over/down-expression in vitro showed that miR-182 was involved in apoptosis and cell cycle pathways, it also associated with the regulation of FOXO1. Conclusions. Our findings indicated that miR-182 plays an onco-miRNA role in cervical cancer and its alteration is associated with cervical cancer pathogenesis by disrupting cell proliferation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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