4.3 Article

STAT3 pathway regulates lung-derived brain metastasis initiating cell capacity through miR-21 activation

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 29, Pages 27461-27477

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.4742

Keywords

brain metastases; brain metastasis initiating cell; STAT3; miR-21

Funding

  1. Department of Surgery at McMaster University
  2. Stem Cell Network Drug Discovery Grant
  3. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research Cancer Stem Cell Program
  4. Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute Innovation Grant
  5. Brain Canada PhD Studentship
  6. Ontario Research Fund [GL2-01-030]
  7. McLaughlin Centre Accelerator [MC-2013-05]
  8. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) [12301, 203373, 29272, 225404, 30865]
  9. Alberta Innovates
  10. Stem Cell Network
  11. CIHR

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Brain metastases (BM) represent the most common tumor to affect the adult central nervous system. Despite the increasing incidence of BM, likely due to consistently improving treatment of primary cancers, BM remain severely understudied. In this study, we utilized patient-derived stem cell lines from lung-to-brain metastases to examine the regulatory role of STAT3 in brain metastasis initiating cells (BMICs). Annotation of our previously described BMIC regulatory genes with protein-protein interaction network mapping identified STAT3 as a novel protein interactor. STAT3 knockdown showed a reduction in BMIC self-renewal and migration, and decreased tumor size in vivo. Screening of BMIC lines with a library of STAT3 inhibitors identified one inhibitor to significantly reduce tumor formation. Meta-analysis identified the oncomir microRNA-21 (miR-21) as a target of STAT3 activity. Inhibition of miR-21 displayed similar reductions in BMIC self-renewal and migration as STAT3 knockdown. Knockdown of STAT3 also reduced expression of known downstream targets of miR-21. Our studies have thus identified STAT3 and miR-21 as cooperative regulators of stemness, migration and tumor initiation in lung-derived BM. Therefore, STAT3 represents a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of lung-to-brain metastases.

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