Abstract

BackgroundFor treatment and prevention of metastatic disease, one of the premier challenges is the identification of pathways and proteins to target for clinical intervention. Micro RNAs (miRNAs) are short, non-coding RNAs, which regulate cellular activities by either mRNA degradation or translational inhibition. Our studies focused on the invasive properties of hsa-mir30c based on its high expression in MDA-MB-231 metastatic cells and our bioinformatic analysis of the Cancer Genome Atlas that identified aberrant hsa-mir-30c to be associated with poor survival.MethodsContributions of hsa-mir-30c to breast cancer cell invasion were examined by Matrigel invasion transwell assays following modulation of hsa-mir-30c or hsa-mir-30c* levels in MDA-MB-231 cells. hsa-mir-30c in silico predicted targets linked to cell invasion were screened for targeting by hsa-mir-30c in metastatic breast cancer cells by RT-qPCR. The contribution to invasion by a target of hsa-mir-30c, Nephroblastoma overexpressed (NOV), was characterized by siRNA and invasion assays. Significant effects were determined using Student’s T-tests with Welch’s correction for unequal variance.ResultsMCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells were used as models of poorly invasive and late-stage metastatic disease, respectively. By modulating the levels of hsa-mir-30c in these cells, we observed concomitant changes in breast cancer cell invasiveness. From predicted targets of hsa-mir-30c that were related to cellular migration and invasion, NOV/CCN3 was identified as a novel target of hsa-mir-30c. Depleting NOV by siRNA caused a significant increase in the invasiveness of MDA-MB-231 cells is a regulatory protein associated with the extracellular matrix.ConclusionsNOV/CCN3 expression, which protects cells from invasion, is known in patient tumors to inversely correlate with advanced breast cancer and metastasis. This study has identified a novel target of hsa-mir-30c, NOV, which is an inhibitor of the invasiveness of metastatic breast cancer cells. Thus, hsa-mir-30c-mediated inhibition of NOV levels promotes the invasive phenotype of MDA-MB-231 cells and significantly, the miR-30/NOV pathways is independent of RUNX2, a known target of hsa-mir-30c that promotes osteolytic disease in metastatic breast cancer cells. Our findings allow for mechanistic insight into the clinical observation of poor survival of patients with elevated hsa-mir-30c levels, which can be considered for miRNA-based translational studies.

Highlights

  • For treatment and prevention of metastatic disease, one of the premier challenges is the identification of pathways and proteins to target for clinical intervention

  • We demonstrated the specificity of this pathway by showing: a) that only the canonical strand of hsa-mir-30c is detected and responsible for the invasive phenotype; and b) that hsamir-30c-Nephroblastoma overexpressed (NOV)/CCN3-mediated invasiveness is completely independent of hsa-mir-30c targeting of Homo sapiens runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2)

  • The phenomenon of alternate utilization of the non-canonical part of the pre-Small non-coding ribonucleic acid (miRNA) has been observed in leukemic cells [20]; we investigated the extent to which this kind of transformation may be occurring in MDA-MB-231 metastatic breast cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

For treatment and prevention of metastatic disease, one of the premier challenges is the identification of pathways and proteins to target for clinical intervention. Our studies focused on the invasive properties of hsa-mir30c based on its high expression in MDA-MB-231 metastatic cells and our bioinformatic analysis of the Cancer Genome Atlas that identified aberrant hsa-mir-30c to be associated with poor survival. Aggressive breast cancers have high potential to become metastatic, a transition that makes clinical intervention difficult. It has been observed that the transcriptome of primary breast cancer cells with a predisposition for metastasis can be distinguished from non-metastatic breast cancer cells [4]. This indicates that steady-state mRNA levels are altered in pre-metastatic tissue to promote metastasis. It is critical to define the events leading to and maintaining a metastatic transcriptional landscape of metastatic breast cancer cells

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