miR-22 represses cancer progression by inducing cellular senescence

Cellular senescence acts as a barrier to cancer progression, and microRNAs (miRNAs) are thought to be potential senescence regulators. However, whether senescence-associated miRNAs (SA-miRNAs) contribute to tumor suppression remains unknown. Here, we report that miR-22, a novel SA-miRNA, has an impa...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of cell biology 2011-04, Vol.193 (2), p.409-424
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Dan, Takeshita, Fumitaka, Hino, Yumiko, Fukunaga, Saori, Kudo, Yasusei, Tamaki, Aya, Matsunaga, Junko, Takahashi, Ryou-U, Takata, Takashi, Shimamoto, Akira, Ochiya, Takahiro, Tahara, Hidetoshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cellular senescence acts as a barrier to cancer progression, and microRNAs (miRNAs) are thought to be potential senescence regulators. However, whether senescence-associated miRNAs (SA-miRNAs) contribute to tumor suppression remains unknown. Here, we report that miR-22, a novel SA-miRNA, has an impact on tumorigenesis. miR-22 is up-regulated in human senescent fibroblasts and epithelial cells but down-regulated in various cancer cell lines. miR-22 overexpression induces growth suppression and acquisition of a senescent phenotype in human normal and cancer cells. miR-22 knockdown in presenescent fibroblasts decreased cell size, and cells became more compact. miR-22-induced senescence also decreases cell motility and inhibits cell invasion in vitro. Synthetic miR-22 delivery suppresses tumor growth and metastasis in vivo by inducing cellular senescence in a mouse model of breast carcinoma. We confirmed that CDK6, SIRT1, and Sp1, genes involved in the senescence program, are direct targets of miR-22. Our study provides the first evidence that miR-22 restores the cellular senescence program in cancer cells and acts as a tumor suppressor.
ISSN:0021-9525
1540-8140
DOI:10.1083/jcb.201010100