4.6 Article

miR-200c-3p spreads invasive capacity in human oral squamous cell carcinoma microenvironment

Journal

MOLECULAR CARCINOGENESIS
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages 295-302

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mc.22744

Keywords

invasion; microarray; microRNA; tumor microenvironment

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (KAKENHI) [17H01603, 26861554, 16K11496, 16K20585]
  2. Central Research Institute of Fukuoka University [157103]
  3. Ichiro Kanehara Foundation [16KI059]
  4. Shin-Nihon of Advanced Medical Research
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16K11496, 16K20585, 26861554, 17H01603] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) constitutes over 90% of all cancers in the oral cavity. The prognosis for patients with invasive OSCC is poor; therefore, it is important to understand the molecular mechanisms of invasion and subsequent metastasis not only to prevent cancer progression but also to detect new therapeutic targets against OSCC. Recently, extracellular vesiclesparticularly exosomeshave been recognized as intercellular communicators in the tumor microenvironment. As exosomic cargo, deregulated microRNAs (miRNAs) can shape the surrounding microenvironment in a cancer-dependent manner. Previous studies have shown inconsistent results regarding miR-200c-3p expression levels in OSCC cell lines, tissues, or serumlikely because of the heterogeneous characters of the specimen materials. For this reason, single-cell clone analyses are necessary to effectively assess the role of exosome-derived miRNAs on cells within the tumor microenvironment. The present study utilized integrated microarray profiling to compare exosome-derived miRNA and exosome-treated cell-derived mRNA expression. Data were acquired from noninvasive SQUU-A and highly invasive SQUU-B tongue cancer cell clones derived from a single patient to determine candidate miRNAs that promote OSCC invasion. Matrigel invasion assays confirmed that hsa-miR-200c-3p was a key pro-invasion factor among six miRNA candidates. Consistently, silencing of the miR-200c-3p targets, CHD9 and WRN, significantly accelerated the invasive potential of SQUU-A cells. Thus, our data indicate that miR-200c-3p in exosomes derived from a highly invasive OSCC line can induce a similar phenotype in non-invasive counterparts.

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