Cancer Biology & Therapy
Volume 10, Issue 3
Authors: Perry S. Mongroo & Anil K. Rustgi
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are single-stranded, non-coding RNA molecules that
regulate gene expression at the post-transcriptional level. Genes
encoding miRNAs are located in regions of the genome that are commonly
amplified, deleted, or rearranged. They are commonly dysregulated in
human cancers and known to act as oncogenes or tumor suppressors.
Members of the miR-200 miRNA family are downregulated in human cancer
cells and tumors due to aberrant epigenetic gene silencing and play a
critical role in the suppression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition
(EMT), tumor cell adhesion, migration, invasion and metastasis, by
targeting and repressing the expression of key mRNAs that are involved
in EMT (ZEB1 and ZEB2), ?-catenin/Wnt signaling (?-catenin), EGFR
inhibitor resistance (ERRFI-1), and chemoresistance to therapeutic
agents (TUBB3). Since the miR-200 family functions as putative tumor
suppressors and represent biomarkers for poorly differentiated and
aggressive cancers, restoration of miR-200 expression may have
therapeutic implications for the treatment of metastatic and
drug-resistant tumors... read more