6533b821fe1ef96bd127c4df

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Resveratrol, MicroRNAs, Inflammation, and Cancer

Esmerina TiliJean-jacques MichailleJean-jacques Michaille

subject

lcsh:QH426-470business.industryInflammatory responseCancerInflammationReview ArticleResveratrolBioinformaticsmedicine.diseaseBiochemistrylcsh:Biochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundlcsh:GeneticsDownregulation and upregulationchemistrymicroRNACancer researchMedicinelcsh:QD415-436medicine.symptombusinessMolecular BiologyGeneHuman cancer

description

MicroRNAs are short noncoding RNAs that regulate the expression of many target genes posttranscriptionally and are thus implicated in a wide array of cellular and developmental processes. The expression ofmiR-155ormiR-21is upregulated during the course of the inflammatory response, but these microRNAs are also considered oncogenes due to their upregulation of expression in several types of tumors. Furthermore, it is now well established that inflammation is associated with the induction or the aggravation of nearly 25% of cancers. Therefore, the above microRNAs are thought to link inflammation and cancer. Recently, resveratrol (trans-3,4′,5-trihydroxystilbene), a natural polyphenol with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anticancer properties, currently at the stage of preclinical studies for human cancer prevention, has been shown to induce the expression ofmiR-663, a tumor-suppressor and anti-inflammatory microRNA, while downregulatingmiR-155andmiR-21. In this paper we will discuss how the use of resveratrol in therapeutics may benefit from the preanalyses on the status of expression ofmiR-155ormiR-21as well as ofTGFβ1. In addition, we will discuss how resveratrol activity might possibly be enhanced by simultaneously manipulating the levels of its key target microRNAs, such asmiR-663.

10.4061/2011/102431http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3154569