Tumour angiogenesis regulation by the miR-200 family

miR-200家族对肿瘤血管生成的调控

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作者:Chad V Pecot,Rajesha Rupaimoole #,Da Yang #,Rehan Akbani #,Cristina Ivan,Chunhua Lu,Sherry Wu,Hee-Dong Han,Maitri Y Shah,Cristian Rodriguez-Aguayo,Justin Bottsford-Miller,Yuexin Liu,Sang Bae Kim,Anna Unruh,Vianey Gonzalez-Villasana,Li Huang,Behrouz Zand,Myrthala Moreno-Smith,Lingegowda S Mangala,Morgan Taylor,Heather J Dalton,Vasudha Sehgal,Yunfei Wen,Yu Kang,Keith A Baggerly,Ju-Seog Lee,Prahlad T Ram,Murali K Ravoori,Vikas Kundra,Xinna Zhang,Rouba Ali-Fehmi,Ana-Maria Gonzalez-Angulo,Pierre P Massion,George A Calin,Gabriel Lopez-Berestein ,Wei Zhang,Anil K Sood

Abstract

The miR-200 family is well known to inhibit the epithelial-mesenchymal transition, suggesting it may therapeutically inhibit metastatic biology. However, conflicting reports regarding the role of miR-200 in suppressing or promoting metastasis in different cancer types have left unanswered questions. Here we demonstrate a difference in clinical outcome based on miR-200's role in blocking tumour angiogenesis. We demonstrate that miR-200 inhibits angiogenesis through direct and indirect mechanisms by targeting interleukin-8 and CXCL1 secreted by the tumour endothelial and cancer cells. Using several experimental models, we demonstrate the therapeutic potential of miR-200 delivery in ovarian, lung, renal and basal-like breast cancers by inhibiting angiogenesis. Delivery of miR-200 members into the tumour endothelium resulted in marked reductions in metastasis and angiogenesis, and induced vascular normalization. The role of miR-200 in blocking cancer angiogenesis in a cancer-dependent context defines its utility as a potential therapeutic agent.

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