MicroRNA Microarray Identifies <i>Let-7i</i> as a Novel Biomarker and Therapeutic Target in Human Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Nuo Yang, Sippy Kaur(University of Helsinki), Stefano Volinia(The Ohio State University), Joel Greshock(Abramson Cancer Center), Heini Lassus(University of Helsinki), Kosei Hasegawa, Shun Liang, Arto Leminen(University of Helsinki), Shan Deng, Lori Smith, Cameron N. Johnstone(Abramson Cancer Center), Xian‐Ming Chen(Creighton University), Chang‐Gong Liu(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Qihong Huang(The Wistar Institute), Dionyssios Katsaros(University of Turin), George A. Calin(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Barbara Weber(Abramson Cancer Center), Ralf Bützow(University of Helsinki), Carlo M. Croce(The Ohio State University), George Coukos(Abramson Cancer Center), Lin Zhang
Cancer Research
December 15, 2008
Cited by 354Open Access
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Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNA) are approximately 22-nucleotide noncoding RNAs that negatively regulate protein-coding gene expression in a sequence-specific manner via translational inhibition or mRNA degradation. Our recent studies showed that miRNAs exhibit genomic alterations at a high frequency and their expression is remarkably deregulated in ovarian cancer, strongly suggesting that miRNAs are involved in the initiation and progression of this disease. In the present study, we performed miRNA microarray to identify the miRNAs associated with chemotherapy response in ovarian cancer and found that let-7i expression was significantly reduced in chemotherapy-resistant patients (n = 69, P = 0.003). This result was further validated by stem-loop real-time reverse transcription-PCR (n = 62, P = 0.015). Both loss-of-function (by synthetic let-7i inhibitor) and gain-of-function (by retroviral overexpression of let-7i) studies showed that reduced let-7i expression significantly increased the resistance of ovarian and breast cancer cells to the chemotherapy drug, cis-platinum. Finally, using miRNA microarray, we found that decreased let-7i expression was significantly associated with the shorter progression-free survival of patients with late-stage ovarian cancer (n = 72, P = 0.042). This finding was further validated in the same sample set by stem-loop real-time reverse transcription-PCR (n = 62, P = 0.001) and in an independent sample set by in situ hybridization (n = 53, P = 0.049). Taken together, our results strongly suggest that let-7i might be used as a therapeutic target to modulate platinum-based chemotherapy and as a biomarker to predict chemotherapy response and survival in patients with ovarian cancer.


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