4.6 Article

miR-29b restrains cholangiocarcinoma progression by relieving DNMT3B-mediated repression of CDKN2B expression

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages 6055-6065

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.202549

Keywords

cholangiocarcinoma; miR-29b; DNMT3B; methylation; CDKN2B

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Guizhou province [[2018]1127]
  2. Regional common diseases and adult stem cell transformation research and innovation platform of Guizhou Provincial Department of science and technology [[2019] 4008]

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The study revealed that miR-29b is frequently downregulated in cholangiocarcinoma and its low expression predicts poor overall survival in patients. Overexpression of miR-29b inhibits proliferation, induces cell cycle arrest, and promotes apoptosis in cancer cells. The mechanism involves relieving DNMT3B-mediated repression of CDKN2B expression.
Numerous studies have reported the important role of microRNAs (miRNAs) in human cancers. Although abnormal miR-29b expression has been linked to tumorigenesis in several cancers, its role in cholangiocarcinoma remains largely unknown. We found that miR-29b expression is frequently downregulated in human cholangiocarcinoma QBC939 cells and in clinical tumor samples. In cholangiocarcinoma patients, low miR-29b expression predicts poor overall survival. Overexpression of miR-29b in QBC939 cells inhibited proliferation, induced G1 phase cycle arrest, and promoted apoptosis. Methylation-specific PCR (MSP) analysis revealed a decreased methylation imprint at the promoter of the cell cycle inhibitor gene CDKN2B in cells overexpressing miR-29b. After identifying the DNA methyltransferase DNMT3B as a putative miR-29b target, luciferase reporter assays confirmed a suppressive effect of miR-29b on DNMT3B expression. Accordingly, we detected an inverse correlation between miR-29b and DNMT3B expression in clinical cholangiocarcinoma specimens. In QBC939 cells, DNMT3B overexpression promoted proliferation and inhibited apoptosis. DNMT3B silencing, in turn, led to increased CDKN2B expression. We also observed significant growth arrest in subcutaneous tumors formed in nude mice by QBC939 cells overexpressing miR-29b. These findings suggest miR-29b functions as a tumor suppressor in cholangiocarcinoma by relieving DNMT3B-mediated repression of CDKN2B expression.

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