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Publication : Cancer affects microRNA expression, release, and function in cardiac and skeletal muscle.

First Author  Chen D Year  2014
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  74
Issue  16 Pages  4270-81
PubMed ID  24980554 Mgi Jnum  J:214245
Mgi Id  MGI:5588617 Doi  10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-2817
Citation  Chen D, et al. (2014) Cancer affects microRNA expression, release, and function in cardiac and skeletal muscle. Cancer Res 74(16):4270-81
abstractText  Circulating microRNAs (miRNA) are emerging as important biomarkers of various diseases, including cancer. Intriguingly, circulating levels of several miRNAs are lower in patients with cancer compared with healthy individuals. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that a circulating miRNA might serve as a surrogate of the effects of cancer on miRNA expression or release in distant organs. Here we report that circulating levels of the muscle-enriched miR486 is lower in patients with breast cancer compared with healthy individuals and that this difference is replicated faithfully in MMTV-PyMT and MMTV-Her2 transgenic mouse models of breast cancer. In tumor-bearing mice, levels of miR486 were relatively reduced in muscle, where there was elevated expression of the miR486 target genes PTEN and FOXO1A and dampened signaling through the PI3K/AKT pathway. Skeletal muscle expressed lower levels of the transcription factor MyoD, which controls miR486 expression. Conditioned media (CM) obtained from MMTV-PyMT and MMTV-Her2/Neu tumor cells cultured in vitro were sufficient to elicit reduced levels of miR486 and increased PTEN and FOXO1A expression in C2C12 murine myoblasts. Cytokine analysis implicated tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) and four additional cytokines as mediators of miR486 expression in CM-treated cells. Because miR486 is a potent modulator of PI3K/AKT signaling and the muscle-enriched transcription factor network in cardiac/skeletal muscle, our findings implicated TNFalpha-dependent miRNA circuitry in muscle differentiation and survival pathways in cancer.
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