4.3 Review

Involvement of inflammation and its related microRNAs in hepatocellular carcinoma

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 13, Pages 22145-22165

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13530

Keywords

inflammation; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; cancer stem cells; cell signaling; microRNAs

Funding

  1. Chinese National Natural Science Funds [31471315, 31671457, K124924615, R14C070002, L224903215]
  2. Natural Science Funds of Zhejiang Province [LR14C070001]
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2016YFA0502500]
  4. Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMW) [8238-20864]

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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most commonly diagnosed type of cancer. The tumor inflammatory microenvironment regulates almost every step towards liver tumorigenesis and subsequent progression, and regulation of the inflammation-related signaling pathways, cytokines, chemokines and noncoding RNAs influences the proliferation, migration and metastasis of liver tumor cells. Inflammation fine-tunes the cancer microenvironment to favor epithelial-mesenchymal transition, in which cancer stem cells maintain tumorigenic potential. Emerging evidence points to inflammation-related microRNAs as crucial molecules to integrate the complex cellular and molecular crosstalk during HCC progression. Thus understanding the mechanisms by which inflammation regulates microRNAs might provide novel and admissible strategies for preventing, diagnosing and treating HCC. In this review, we will update three hypotheses of hepatocarcinogenesis and elaborate the most predominant inflammation signaling pathways, i.e. IL-6/STAT3 and NF-kappa B. We also try to summarize the crucial tumor-promoting and tumor-suppressing microRNAs and detail how they regulate HCC initiation and progression and collaborate with other critical modulators in this review.

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