First Author | Bonetti P | Year | 2019 |
Journal | Oncogene | Volume | 38 |
Issue | 3 | Pages | 360-374 |
PubMed ID | 30093634 | Mgi Jnum | J:269942 |
Mgi Id | MGI:6273555 | Doi | 10.1038/s41388-018-0445-3 |
Citation | Bonetti P, et al. (2018) Dual role for miR-34a in the control of early progenitor proliferation and commitment in the mammary gland and in breast cancer. Oncogene |
abstractText | The role of the tumour-suppressor miR-34 family in breast physiology and in mammary stem cells (MaSCs) is largely unknown. Here, we revealed that miR-34 family, and miR-34a in particular, is implicated in mammary epithelium homoeostasis. Expression of miR-34a occurs upon luminal commitment and differentiation and serves to inhibit the expansion of the pool of MaSCs and early progenitor cells, likely in a p53-independent fashion. Mutant mice (miR34-KO) and loss-of-function approaches revealed two separate functions of miR-34a, controlling both proliferation and fate commitment in mammary progenitors by modulating several pathways involved in epithelial cell plasticity and luminal-to-basal conversion. In particular, miR-34a acts as endogenous inhibitor of the Wnt/beta-catenin signalling pathway, targeting up to nine upstream regulators at the same time, thus modulating the expansion of the MaSCs/early progenitor pool. These multiple roles of miR-34a are maintained in a model of human breast cancer, in which chronic expression of miR-34a in triple-negative mesenchymal-like cells (enriched in cancer stem cells-CSCs) could promote a luminal-like differentiation programme, restrict the CSC pool, and inhibit tumour propagation. Hence, activation of miR-34a-dependent programmes could provide a therapeutic opportunity for the subset of breast cancers, which are rich in CSCs and respond poorly to conventional therapies. |