Abstract

We recently showed that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are able to inhibit the lung tumors induced by cigarette smoke, either mainstream (MCS) or environmental (ECS), in female mice. We used subsets of mice to analyze the expression of 1135 microRNAs in both lung and blood serum, as related to the whole-body exposure to smoke and/or oral administration of either aspirin or naproxen. In a first study, we evaluated early microRNA alterations in A/J mice exposed to ECS for 10 weeks, starting at birth, and/or treated with NSAIDs for 6 weeks, starting after weaning. At that time, when no histopathological change were apparent, ECS caused a considerable downregulation of pulmonary microRNAs affecting both adaptive mechanisms and disease-related pathways. Aspirin and naproxen modulated, with intergender differences, the expression of microRNAs having a variety of functions, also including regulation of cyclooxygenases and inflammation. In a second study, we evaluated late microRNA alterations in Swiss H mice exposed to MCS during the first 4 months of life and treated with NSAIDs after weaning until 7.5 months of life, when tumors were detected in mouse lung. Modulation of pulmonary microRNAs by the two NSAIDs was correlated with their ability to prevent preneoplastic lesions (microadenomas) and adenomas in the lung. In both studies, exposure to smoke and/or treatment with NSAIDs also modulated microRNA profiles in the blood serum. However, their levels were poorly correlated with those of pulmonary microRNAs, presumably because circulating microRNAs reflect the contributions from multiple organs and not only from lung.

Highlights

  • Tobacco smoking has been causally associated with the induction of lung cancer and other cancers affecting the respiratory tract, urinary tract, digestive system, and hematopoietic system [1]

  • We recently showed that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are able to inhibit the lung tumors induced by cigarette smoke, either mainstream (MCS) or environmental (ECS), in female mice

  • We evaluated late microRNA alterations in Swiss H mice exposed to mainstream CS (MCS) during the first 4 months of life and treated with NSAIDs after weaning until 7.5 months of life, when tumors were detected in mouse lung

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Tobacco smoking has been causally associated with the induction of lung cancer and other cancers affecting the respiratory tract, urinary tract, digestive system, and hematopoietic system [1]. After an additional 3.5 months in filtered air, both aspirin and naproxen consistently decreased the incidence of lung adenomas, an effect that was statistically significant in female mice [21] These findings were confirmed in a separate study in A/J mice exposed to ECS, which followed a protocol similar to the model developed by www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget. The second study examined the same MCS-exposed Swiss H mice used in the previous cancer chemoprevention study [21] and evaluated late alterations of miRNAs detectable after 7.5 months, when preneoplastic lesions and tumors occurred in mouse lung. The results obtained highlight a complex picture underlying the early and late effects of either ECS or MCS and/or modulation by NSAIDs of the miRNA machinery in lung and blood serum They complement the data relative to other intermediate biomarkers and to occurrence of CS-related lung tumors

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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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