MicroRNA Gene Expression Deregulation in Human Breast Cancer

2005 Cancer Research 4,027 citations

Abstract

Abstract MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small noncoding RNAs that control gene expression by targeting mRNAs and triggering either translation repression or RNA degradation. Their aberrant expression may be involved in human diseases, including cancer. Indeed, miRNA aberrant expression has been previously found in human chronic lymphocytic leukemias, where miRNA signatures were associated with specific clinicobiological features. Here, we show that, compared with normal breast tissue, miRNAs are also aberrantly expressed in human breast cancer. The overall miRNA expression could clearly separate normal versus cancer tissues, with the most significantly deregulated miRNAs being mir-125b, mir-145, mir-21, and mir-155. Results were confirmed by microarray and Northern blot analyses. We could identify miRNAs whose expression was correlated with specific breast cancer biopathologic features, such as estrogen and progesterone receptor expression, tumor stage, vascular invasion, or proliferation index.

Keywords

microRNABiologyBreast cancerGene expressionCancerGene silencingCancer researchRegulation of gene expressionEstrogen receptorMicroarrayGeneGenetics

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
65
Issue
16
Pages
7065-7070
Citations
4027
Access
Closed

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Marilena V. Iorio, Manuela Ferracin, Chang‐Gong Liu et al. (2005). MicroRNA Gene Expression Deregulation in Human Breast Cancer. Cancer Research , 65 (16) , 7065-7070. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-05-1783

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DOI
10.1158/0008-5472.can-05-1783