Abstract

MiR-16 and other several known oncogenes co-exist in various solid tumors and play carcinogenic roles in many tumors. This study explores whether miR-16 regulates autophagy expression and analyzes the role of targeted nanoparticle intervention in glioma. miR-16 and LC3 expressions were examined by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). They were assessed in normal lymphocytes, low-metastatic glioma, and high-metastatic glioma cell lines as well. The glioma cell line U251 was used to detect and compare the expression of LC3. Flow cytometry detected cell proliferation and the number of cell invasion and metastasis was detected by Transwell. LC3 mRNA in glioma tissues was evidently increased. The later the Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) stage, the lower expression of miR-16 and the higher expression of LC3, which is related to TNM stage. LC3 mRNA in glioma cells was obviously higher than normal cells while miR-16 was lower than the latter. The expression of LC3 in glioma cell line U251 was higher, while miR-16 was lower. Transfection of siRNA-LC3 and targeted nanoparticles could effectively down-regulate the level of LC3 in the glioma cell line U251. In conclusion, miR-16 is related to the increased expression of LC3 and the enhanced ability of glioma cells to invade and metastasize.

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