miR-203 drives breast cancer cell differentiation

被引:0
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作者
Nuria G. Martínez-Illescas
Silvia Leal
Patricia González
Osvaldo Graña-Castro
Juan José Muñoz-Oliveira
Alfonso Cortés-Peña
María Gómez-Gil
Zaira Vega
Verónica Neva
Andrea Romero
Miguel Quintela-Fandino
Eva Ciruelos
Consuelo Sanz
Sofía Aragón
Leisy Sotolongo
Sara Jiménez
Eduardo Caleiras
Francisca Mulero
Cristina Sánchez
Marcos Malumbres
María Salazar-Roa
机构
[1] Complutense University,Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of Biology
[2] Research Institute i+12,Breast and Gynecologic Cancer Group
[3] Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO),Cell Division and Cancer Group, Molecular Oncology Program
[4] CNIO,Molecular Imaging Unit
[5] CNIO,Histopathology Unit
[6] CNIO,Bioinformatics Unit
[7] San Pablo-CEU University,Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Institute of Applied Molecular Medicine (IMMA
[8] Complutense University,Nemesio Díez)
[9] CNIO,Flow Cytometry and Fluorescence Microscopy Unit (CAI)
[10] Hospital 12 de Octubre,Breast Cancer Clinical Research Unit, Clinical Research Program
[11] Vall d’Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO),Cancer Cell Cycle Group
[12] ICREA,undefined
来源
Breast Cancer Research | / 25卷
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摘要
A hallmark of many malignant tumors is dedifferentiated (immature) cells bearing slight or no resemblance to the normal cells from which the cancer originated. Tumor dedifferentiated cells exhibit a higher capacity to survive to chemo and radiotherapies and have the ability to incite tumor relapse. Inducing cancer cell differentiation would abolish their self-renewal and invasive capacity and could be combined with the current standard of care, especially in poorly differentiated and aggressive tumors (with worst prognosis). However, differentiation therapy is still in its early stages and the intrinsic complexity of solid tumor heterogeneity demands innovative approaches in order to be efficiently translated into the clinic. We demonstrate here that microRNA 203, a potent driver of differentiation in pluripotent stem cells (ESCs and iPSCs), promotes the differentiation of mammary gland tumor cells. Combining mouse in vivo approaches and both mouse and human-derived tridimensional organoid cultures, we report that miR-203 influences the self-renewal capacity, plasticity and differentiation potential of breast cancer cells and prevents tumor cell growth in vivo. Our work sheds light on differentiation-based antitumor therapies and offers miR-203 as a promising tool for directly confronting the tumor-maintaining and regeneration capability of cancer cells.
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