Citation

  • Authors: Gabriely, G., Yi, M., Narayan, R. S., Niers, J. M., Wurdinger, T., Imitola, J., Ligon, K. L., Kesari, S., Esau, C., Stephens, R. M., Tannous, B. A., Krichevsky, A. M.
  • Year: 2011
  • Journal: Cancer Res 71 3563-72
  • Applications: in vivo / mimic miRNA / in vivo-jetPEI

Method

8 µg of anti-miR oligo was injected with in vivo-jetPEI at a N/P ratio of 7.5 into mice through intratumoral injection. 5 injections were performed at day 19, 20, 21, 33 and 34 after tumor cell inoculation and tumor growth was monitored.

Abstract

MicroRNA (miRNA) expression profiling studies revealed a number of miRNAs dysregulated in the malignant brain tumor glioblastoma. Molecular functions of these miRNAs in gliomagenesis are mainly unknown. We show that inhibition of miR-10b, a miRNA not expressed in human brain and strongly upregulated in both low-grade and high-grade gliomas, reduces glioma cell growth by cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis. These cellular responses are mediated by augmented expression of the direct targets of miR-10b, including BCL2L11/Bim, TFAP2C/AP-2gamma, CDKN1A/p21, and CDKN2A/p16, which normally protect cells from uncontrolled growth. Analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas expression data set reveals a strong positive correlation between numerous genes sustaining cellular growth and miR-10b levels in human glioblastomas, while proapoptotic genes anticorrelate with the expression of miR-10b. Furthermore, survival of glioblastoma patients expressing high levels of miR-10 family members is significantly reduced in comparison to patients with low miR-10 levels, indicating that miR-10 may contribute to glioma growth in vivo. Finally, inhibition of miR-10b in a mouse model of human glioma results in significant reduction of tumor growth. Altogether, our experiments validate an important role of miR-10b in gliomagenesis, reveal a novel mechanism of miR-10b-mediated regulation, and suggest the possibility of its future use as a therapeutic target in gliomas.

Go to