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1 Watson School of Biological Sciences, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York and 2 Program in Genetics, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York
Requests for reprints: Gregory J. Hannon, Watson School of Biological Sciences, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724. Phone: 516-367-8889; Fax: 516-367-8874; E-mail: hannon{at}cshl.edu.
| Abstract |
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| Background |
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miRNAs are small, 18- to 24-nucleotide noncoding RNAs that regulate gene expression largely through effects on productive translation and mRNA stability (5–7). Nascent miRNA transcripts (pri-miRNAs) are often RNA polymerase II products, with promoters that closely resemble those of protein-coding genes. Rather than being exported to the cytoplasm for translation, pri-miRNAs are processed by the microprocessor complex in the nucleus, and the hairpin products (pre-miRNAs) are then cleaved by Dicer in the cytoplasm to generate mature miRNA duplexes (5–7). The mature miRNA joins RNA-induced silencing complex, which it guides to target mRNAs by imperfect base pairing that depends mainly on the "seed," sequences comprising bases 2 to 7 of the mature miRNA (6).
Increasing evidence has suggested that miRNAs are components of oncogene and tumor suppressor pathways. Inappropriate expression and structural alterations of miRNA genes have been found in a variety of tumor types (8, 9), and several functional studies have shown the oncogenic or tumor-suppressive potential of specific miRNA families (10–13). Among these are five recent reports that uncover miRNA components in the p53 tumor suppressor network (14–18).
| Key Findings |
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Shortly afterward, links to tumor biology solidified with the finding that miR-34 levels correlated with p53 status. Four groups approached the general relationship between p53 and miRNAs using a variety of different profiling approaches and cellular contexts. Chang et al. (15) compared miRNA profiles of p53+/+ and p53–/– HCT116 cells in response to DNA damage, whereas Raver-Shapira et al. (17) and Tarasov et al. (18) probed miRNA levels in lung carcinoma cells (H1299) harboring regulated p53 alleles. He et al. (16) compared miRNA expression in a series of p53+/+ and p53–/– mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF) bearing several different oncogenic lesions. In addition, Bommer et al. (14) identified miR-34 family from a previously published genome-wide p53 chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis (20). Several potentially p53-responsive miRNAs emerged from these studies, but all five groups zeroed in on the miR-34 family for further study.
There are two mir-34 loci in vertebrate genomes, one encoding miR-34a and the other yielding both miR-34b and miR-34c from a single primary transcript. Both genes show little conservation even among closely related species, except in the miRNA-encoding sequences and in short promoter proximal regions that each contains a consensus p53-binding site (14–18). The miR-34a and miR-34b/miR-34c loci are regulated directly by interaction of p53 with these consensus sites, as can be shown by chromatin immunoprecipitation (14, 16–18) and by the ability of miR-34 promoters to drive expression of luciferase reporters in a p53-dependent manner (14–17). The consequences of miR-34 activation may vary depending on the cell type. In some cases, ectopic expression or delivery of synthetic miR-34 mimetics resulted in cell cycle arrest or senescence (16). In other cases, the output was apoptosis, with the response being reduced by inhibition or depletion of miR-34 (14, 17). Achieving these different outcomes may depend on the spectrum of miR-34 regulatory targets that are expressed in a given cell type. A combination of bioinformatic predictions and experimental analysis led to the notion that miR-34s control broad programs of targets involved in cell cycle control, apoptosis, and DNA repair, among which cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) 4, cyclin E2, cMet, cdk6, and bcl-2 were shown as possible candidates (14, 16).
| Implications |
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With accumulating evidence revealing the importance of miRNAs in cancer, it is now accepted that miRNAs can have tumor suppressor or oncogenic activity. For example, 13q14, a chromosomal locus deleted in >50% of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemias, contains two miRNAs, miR-15 and miR-16, which suppress the expression of bcl-2 and likely act as tumor suppressors (10). The miR-17-92 gene, which is amplified in B-cell lymphomas and shows altered expression in numerous tumor types, displays oncogenic activity in a variety of models (11). Now, we see that miR-34s may at least participate in tumor suppression as part of the p53 network. Whether or not miR-34s are bona fide tumor suppressors in their own right awaits further study. The mir-34a gene maps to 1p36, a region of common loss in many human tumor types (19). In addition, reduced miR-34a expression is a frequent feature of both pancreatic tumors and neuroblastomas (15, 19) and reduced miR-34b and miR-34c expression has been observed in a subset of non–small cell lung cancers (14). In these cases, the lack of miR-34 may not simply reflect the loss of p53 as p53 is often wild-type in these tumors. Overall, accumulating evidence is forcing us to remodel our notions of oncogenes and tumor suppressors to include noncoding RNAs, and as a class, these may afford new opportunities for diagnosis and treatment of human cancer.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received 7/13/07. Revised 8/16/07. Accepted 8/20/07.
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