6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126aebd
RESEARCH PRODUCT
MicroRNA-33b Suppresses Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition Repressing the MYC-EZH2 Pathway in HER2+ Breast Carcinoma
Birlipta PattanayakIris Garrido-canoAnna Adam-artiguesEduardo TormoEduardo TormoBegoña PinedaBegoña PinedaBegoña PinedaPaula CabelloElisa AlonsoElisa AlonsoBegoña BermejoBegoña BermejoBegoña BermejoCristina HernandoCristina HernandoMaría Teresa MartínezMaría Teresa MartínezAna RoviraAna RoviraJoan AlbanellJoan AlbanellJoan AlbanellFederico RojoFederico RojoOctavio BurguésOctavio BurguésJuan Miguel CejalvoJuan Miguel CejalvoAna LluchAna LluchAna LluchAna LluchPilar ErolesPilar ErolesPilar Erolessubject
0301 basic medicineHER2+Mama ExamenCancer ResearchmiRNA-33bCellular differentiationVimentinMYCmacromolecular substanceslcsh:RC254-28203 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinebreast cancerDownregulation and upregulationmicroRNAGene silencingEpithelial–mesenchymal transitionEZH2CàncerbiologyCell growthChemistryEZH2EMTlcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens030104 developmental biologyOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisbiology.proteinCancer researchdescription
Downregulation of miR-33b has been documented in many types of cancers and is being involved in proliferation, migration, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Furthermore, the enhancer of zeste homolog 2-gene (EZH2) is a master regulator of controlling the stem cell differentiation and the cell proliferation processes. We aim to evaluate the implication of miR-33b in the EMT pathway in HER2+ breast cancer (BC) and to analyze the role of EZH2 in this process as well as the interaction between them. miR-33b is downregulated in HER2+ BC cells vs healthy controls, where EZH2 has an opposite expression in vitro and in patients' samples. The upregulation of miR-33b suppressed proliferation, induced apoptosis, reduced invasion, migration and regulated EMT by an increase of E-cadherin and a decrease of ß-catenin and vimentin. The silencing of EZH2 mimicked the impact of miR-33b overexpression. Furthermore, the inhibition of miR-33b induces cell proliferation, invasion, migration, EMT, and EZH2 expression in non-tumorigenic cells. Importantly, the Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a significant association between high miR-33b expression and better overall survival. These results suggest miR-33b as a suppressive miRNA that could inhibit tumor metastasis and invasion in HER2+ BC partly by impeding EMT through the repression of the MYC-EZH2 loop.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-09-10 |