4.6 Article

Cigarette Smoking Alters the Expression of Circulating microRNAs and Its Potential Diagnostic Value in Female Lung Cancer Patients

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology10080793

Keywords

lung adenocarcinoma; circulating microRNAs; cigarette smoking; diagnostic biomarker

Categories

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACyT)
  2. Fondo Sectorial de Investigacion en Salud y Seguridad Social (FOSSIS) [261999]

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The study suggests that cigarette smoking can impact the reliable identification of circulating miRNAs as diagnostic biomarkers in lung cancer, with a potential pathogenic role of miR-133a-3p in smokers.
Simple Summary In this study, we investigated whether circulating microRNA expression levels and their potential diagnostic value are affected by cigarette smoking in lung cancer patients and healthy participants. Our findings support that cigarette smoking affects the reliable identification of circulating miRNAs as diagnostic biomarkers in lung cancer and suggest a smoking-dependent pathogenic role of miR-133a-3p in smokers. Cigarette smoking is a known risk factor for the development of lung cancer. We investigated whether circulating microRNA expression levels and their potential diagnostic value are affected by cigarette smoking in adenocarcinoma (AD) patients and healthy (H) participants. In total, 71 female AD patients and 91 H individuals were recruited, including 42 AD never-smokers (AD/CS-), 29 AD smokers (AD/CS+), 54 H never-smokers (H/CS-), and 37 H smokers (H/CS+). PCR array (754 microRNAs) and qPCR were performed on sera from the discovery and validation cohorts, respectively. The expression levels of miR-532-5p, miR-25-3p, and miR-133a-3p were significantly higher in adenocarcinoma patients than in healthy participants, independent of their smoking status. Multivariate analysis showed that levels of miR-133a-3p were independently associated with smoking. ROC analysis showed that only miR-532-5p discriminated AD patients from H controls (AUC: 0.745). However, when making comparisons according to cigarette smoking status, miR-532-5p discriminated AD/CS- patients from H/CS- controls with a higher AUC (AUC:0.762); miR-25-3p discriminated AD/CS+ patients from H/CS+ controls (AUC: 0.779), and miR-133a discriminated AD/CS+ patients from H/CS+ controls with the highest AUC of 0.935. Cancer and lung-cancer-enriched pathways were significantly associated with the three miRNAs; in addition, nicotinate/nicotinamide metabolism, inflammation, and pulmonary hypertension were associated with miR-133a-3p. Our findings highlight how cigarette smoking affects the reliable identification of circulating miRNAs as diagnostic biomarkers in lung cancer and suggest a smoking-dependent pathogenic role of miR-133a-3p in smokers.

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