Enhanced Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition and Chemoresistance in Advanced Retinoblastoma Tumors Is Driven by miR-181a

Advanced retinoblastoma (Rb) tumors display high metastatic spread to distant tissues, causing a potent threat to vision and life. Through transcriptomic profiling, we discovered key upregulated genes that belonged to the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and chemotherapy resistance pathways i...

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Veröffentlicht in:CANCERS 2022-10, Vol.14 (20)
Hauptverfasser: Babu, Vishnu Suresh, Bisht, Anadi, Mallipatna, Ashwin, Deepak, S.A, Dudeja, Gagan, Kannan, Ramaraj, Shetty, Rohit, Guha, Nilanjan, Heymans, Stephane, Ghosh, Arkasubhra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Advanced retinoblastoma (Rb) tumors display high metastatic spread to distant tissues, causing a potent threat to vision and life. Through transcriptomic profiling, we discovered key upregulated genes that belonged to the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and chemotherapy resistance pathways in advanced Rb tumors. Through in vitro models, we further showed that Rb null tumor cells under prolonged chemo drug exposure, acquires a metastasis-like phenotype through the EMT program mediated by ZEB1 and SNAI2 and these cells further acquires chemotherapeutic resistance through cathepsin-L- and MDR1-mediated drug efflux mechanisms. Using a miRNA microarray, we identified miR-181a-5p as being significantly reduced in advanced Rb tumors, which was associated with an altered EMT and drug-resistance genes. We showed that enhancing miR-181a-5p levels in Rb null chemo-resistant sublines reduced the ZEB1 and SNAI2 levels and halted the mesenchymal transition switch, further reducing the drug resistance. We thus identified miR-181a-5p as a therapeutically exploitable target for EMT-triggered drug-resistant cancers that halted their invasion and migration and sensitized them to low-dose chemotherapy drugs.
ISSN:2072-6694
2072-6694