<i>miR-152</i> Is a Tumor Suppressor microRNA That Is Silenced by DNA Hypermethylation in Endometrial Cancer

Tomohiko Tsuruta(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Ken‐ichi Kozaki(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Atsushi Uesugi(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Mayuko Furuta(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Akira Hirasawa(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Issei Imoto(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Nobuyuki Susumu(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Daisuke Aoki(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Johji Inazawa(Tokyo Medical and Dental University)
Cancer Research
August 25, 2011
Cited by 230Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract The etiology and development of human cancers that remain little understood might be enlightened by defining tumor suppressor microRNAs (TS-miRNA). In this study, we identified TS-miRNAs silenced by aberrant DNA hypermethylation in endometrial cancer. Functional screening of 327 synthetic miRNAs in an endometrial cancer cell proliferation assay identified 103 miRNAs that inhibited cell growth. We then determined the sequence, DNA methylation status, and expression levels of these miRNAs in endometrial cancer cell lines and primary tumors. These determinations led to the identification of miR-152 as a candidate TS-miRNA gene in endometrial cancer. Epigenetic silencing documented in miR-152 was consistent with its location at 17q21.32 in intron 1 of the COPZ2 gene, which is also silenced often in endometrial cancer by DNA hypermethylation, and also with evidence that miR-152 targets the DNA methyltransferase DNMT1. Notably, restoration of miR-152 expression in endometrial cancer cell lines was sufficient to inhibit tumor cell growth in vitro and in vivo. We identified E2F3, MET, and Rictor as novel candidate targets of miR-152, suggesting how its epigenetic silencing can drive endometrial carcinogenesis. Our findings define a central role for miR-152 in endometrial cancer, and they also suggest its use in new therapeutic strategies to treat this cancer. Cancer Res; 71(20); 6450–62. ©2011 AACR.


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