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RESEARCH PRODUCT

MiR-29b antagonizes the pro-inflammatory tumor-promoting activity of multiple myeloma-educated dendritic cells

Rao PrabhalaMarco RossiAnna Maria GullàCaterina RiilloChiara MignognaA Di VitoDaniele CaraccioloPierfrancesco TassonePierfrancesco TassoneM T Di MartinoEmanuela AltomareLavinia BiamonteNicola AmodioEugenio MorelliMaria Rita PitariAntonio GiordanoAntonio GiordanoM E Gallo CantafioPierosandro TagliaferriNikhil C. MunshiNikhil C. MunshiP. CorrealeCirino BottaMaria Cucè

subject

STAT3 Transcription Factor0301 basic medicineCancer Researchdendritic cellDown-RegulationInflammationMice SCIDBiologyMice03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDownregulation and upregulationBone MarrowCell Line Tumorhemic and lymphatic diseasesmicroRNAmedicineAnimalsHumanstumor immunologyMultiple myelomaCell ProliferationInflammationmicroRNA.Cell growthNF-kappa BDendritic CellsHematologySTAT3 Transcription Factormedicine.diseaseNFKB1Up-RegulationGene Expression Regulation Neoplasticmultiple myelomaMicroRNAs030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyCancer researchOriginal ArticleFemaleBone marrowTh17medicine.symptom030215 immunology

description

Dendritic cells (DCs) have a key role in regulating tumor immunity, tumor cell growth and drug resistance. We hypothesized that multiple myeloma (MM) cells might recruit and reprogram DCs to a tumor-permissive phenotype by changes within their microRNA (miRNA) network. By analyzing six different miRNA-profiling data sets, miR-29b was identified as the only miRNA upregulated in normal mature DCs and significantly downregulated in tumor-associated DCs. This finding was validated in primary DCs co-cultured in vitro with MM cell lines and in primary bone marrow DCs from MM patients. In DCs co-cultured with MM cells, enforced expression of miR-29b counteracted pro-inflammatory pathways, including signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 and nuclear factor-κ B, and cytokine/chemokine signaling networks, which correlated with patients' adverse prognosis and development of bone disease. Moreover, miR-29b downregulated interleukin-23 in vitro and in the SCID-synth-hu in vivo model, and antagonized a Th17 inflammatory response. All together, these effects translated into strong anti-proliferative activity and reduction of genomic instability of MM cells. Our study demonstrates that MM reprograms the DCs functional phenotype by downregulating miR-29b whose reconstitution impairs DCs ability to sustain MM cell growth and survival. These results underscore miR-29b as an innovative and attractive candidate for miRNA-based immune therapy of MM.

10.1038/leu.2017.336http://hdl.handle.net/11365/1035440