4.3 Article

miR-19b promotes breast cancer metastasis through targeting MYLIP and its related cell adhesion molecules

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 38, Pages 64330-64343

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.19278

Keywords

miR-19b; MYLIP; cell adhesion molecules; breast cancer; metastasis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81602575, 61572200]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hunan Province [2017JJ3430, 2017JJ3497]
  3. Xiang Jiang Scholars Program/Hong Kong Scholars Program [XJ2016054]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016M590756]
  5. Postdoctoral Science Foundation of Central South University

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miR-19b is a key molecule for cancer development, however its crucial roles in breast cancer metastasis are rarely studied right now. In this study, using several bioinformatics databases to predict the downstream targets for miR-19b, we verified that a novel target gene, myosin regulatory light chain interacting protein (MYLIP), could be directly down-regulated by miR-19b through its 3'-UTR region. MYLIP belongs to the cytoskeletal protein clusters and is involved in the regulation of cell movement and migration. We further explored that miR-19b was highly expressed and negatively correlated with MYLIP expression in breast cancer patient samples from the TCGA database. And the over-expression of miR-19b or inhibition of MYLIP facilitated the migration and metastasis of breast cancer cells, through conducting the wound healing assay and transwell invasion assay. Additionally, miR-19b could obviously promote breast tumor growth in mouse models and affect the expressions of cell adhesion molecules (including E-Cadherin, ICAM-1 and Integrin beta 1) by down-regulating E-Cadherin expression and up-regulating ICAM-1 and Integrin beta 1 expressions in vitro and in vivo. Meanwhile, miR-19b effectively activated the Integrin beta downstream signaling pathways (such as the Ras-MAPK pathway and the PI3K-AKT pathway) and elevated the expression levels of essential genes in these two pathways. Taken together, these findings comprehensively illustrate the regulatory mechanisms ofmiR-19b in breast cancer metastasis, and provide us new insights for exploring MYLIP and its related cell adhesion molecules as promising therapeutic targets to interfere breast cancer development.

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