Reprogramming of miRNA networks in cancer and leukemia

Stefano Volinia(University of Ferrara), Marco Galasso(University of Ferrara), Stefan Costinean(The Ohio State University), Luca Tagliavini(University of Ferrara), Giacomo Gamberoni(University of Ferrara), Alessandra Drusco(The Ohio State University), Jlenia Marchesini(University of Ferrara), Nicoletta Mascellani(University of Ferrara), Maria Elena Sana(University of Ferrara), Ramzey Abu Jarour(Scripps Research Institute), Caroline Desponts(Scripps Research Institute), Michael A. Teitell(University of California, Los Angeles), Raffaele Baffa(Thomas Jefferson University), Rami I. Aqeilan(The Ohio State University), Marilena V. Iorio(Istituto Tumori Bari), Cristian Taccioli(The Ohio State University), Ramiro Garzon(The Ohio State University), Gianpiero Di Leva(The Ohio State University), Muller Fabbri(The Ohio State University), Marco Catozzi(University of Ferrara), Maurizio Previati(University of Ferrara), Stefan Ambs(National Institutes of Health), Tiziana Palumbo(The Ohio State University), Michela Garofalo(The Ohio State University), Angelo Veronese(The Ohio State University), Arianna Bottoni(The Ohio State University), Pierluigi Gasparini(The Ohio State University), Curtis C. Harris(National Institutes of Health), Rosa Visone(The Ohio State University), Yuri Pekarsky(The Ohio State University), Albert de la Chapelle(The Ohio State University), Mark Bloomston(The Ohio State University), Mary Dillhoff(The Ohio State University), Laura Z. Rassenti(University of California San Diego), Thomas J. Kipps(University of California San Diego), Kay Huebner(The Ohio State University), Flavia Pichiorri(The Ohio State University), Dido Lenze(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Stefano Cairo(Institut Pasteur), Marie‐Annick Buendia(Institut Pasteur), Pascal Pineau(Inserm), Anne Dejean(Inserm), Nicola Zanesi(The Ohio State University), Simona Rossi(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), George A. Calin(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Chang‐Gong Liu(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jeff Palatini(The Ohio State University), Massimo Negrini(University of Ferrara), Andrea Vecchione(University of Salerno), Anne Rosenberg(Thomas Jefferson University), Carlo M. Croce(The Ohio State University)
Genome Research
May 1, 2010
Cited by 351Open Access
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Abstract

We studied miRNA profiles in 4419 human samples (3312 neoplastic, 1107 nonmalignant), corresponding to 50 normal tissues and 51 cancer types. The complexity of our database enabled us to perform a detailed analysis of microRNA (miRNA) activities. We inferred genetic networks from miRNA expression in normal tissues and cancer. We also built, for the first time, specialized miRNA networks for solid tumors and leukemias. Nonmalignant tissues and cancer networks displayed a change in hubs, the most connected miRNAs. hsa-miR-103/106 were downgraded in cancer, whereas hsa-miR-30 became most prominent. Cancer networks appeared as built from disjointed subnetworks, as opposed to normal tissues. A comparison of these nets allowed us to identify key miRNA cliques in cancer. We also investigated miRNA copy number alterations in 744 cancer samples, at a resolution of 150 kb. Members of miRNA families should be similarly deleted or amplified, since they repress the same cellular targets and are thus expected to have similar impacts on oncogenesis. We correctly identified hsa-miR-17/92 family as amplified and the hsa-miR-143/145 cluster as deleted. Other miRNAs, such as hsa-miR-30 and hsa-miR-204, were found to be physically altered at the DNA copy number level as well. By combining differential expression, genetic networks, and DNA copy number alterations, we confirmed, or discovered, miRNAs with comprehensive roles in cancer. Finally, we experimentally validated the miRNA network with acute lymphocytic leukemia originated in Mir155 transgenic mice. Most of miRNAs deregulated in these transgenic mice were located close to hsa-miR-155 in the cancer network.


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