Purpose To investigate the involvement of hsa-microRNA-195-5p (miR-195) in progression and prognosis of human prostate cancer (PCa). Experimental Design qRT-PCR was performed to detect miR-195 expression in both PCa cell lines and clinical tissue samples. Its clinical significance was statistically analyzed. The roles of miR-195 and its candidate target gene ribosomal protein S6 kinase, 70kDa, polypeptide 1 (RPS6KB1) in PCa progression were confirmed based on both in vitro and in vivo systems. Results MiR-195 downregulation in PCa tissues was significantly associated with high Gleason score (P=0.001), positive metastasis failure (P<0.001) and biochemical recurrence (BCR, P<0.001). Survival analysis identified miR-195 as an independent prognostic factor for BCR-free survival of PCa patients (P=0.022). Then, we confirmed the tumor suppressive role of miR-195 through PCa cell invasion, migration and apoptosis assays in vitro, along with tumor xenografts growth, angiogenesis and invasion in vivo according to both gain-of-function and loss-of-function experiments. Additionally, RPS6KB1 was identified as a novel direct target of miR-195 through proteomic expression profiling combined with bioinformatic target prediction and luciferase reporter assay. Moreover, the re-expression and knockdown of RPS6KB1 could respectively rescue and imitate the effects induced by miR-195. Importantly, RPS6KB1 expression was closely correlated with aggressive progression and poor prognosis in PCa patients as opposed to miR-195. Furthermore, we identified MMP-9, VEGF, BAD and E-cadherin as the downstream effectors of miR-195-RPS6KB1 axis. Conclusion The newly identified miR-195-RPS6KB1 axis partially illustrates the molecular mechanism of PCa progression and represents a novel potential therapeutic target for PCa treatment.
The underlying mechanism by which anti-VEGF agents prolong cancer patient survival is poorly understood. We show that in a mouse tumor model, VEGF systemically impairs functions of multiple organs including those in the hematopoietic and endocrine systems, leading to early death. Anti-VEGF antibody, bevacizumab, and anti-VEGF receptor 2 (VEGFR-2), but not anti-VEGFR-1, reversed VEGF-induced cancer-associated systemic syndrome (CASS) and prevented death in tumor-bearing mice. Surprisingly, VEGFR2 blockage improved survival by rescuing mice from CASS without significantly compromising tumor growth, suggesting that “off-tumor” VEGF targets are more sensitive than the tumor vasculature to anti-VEGF drugs. Similarly, VEGF-induced CASS occurred in a spontaneous breast cancer mouse model overexpressing neu . Clinically, VEGF expression and CASS severity positively correlated in various human cancers. These findings define novel therapeutic targets of anti-VEGF agents and provide mechanistic insights into the action of this new class of clinically available anti-VEGF cancer drugs.
Our previous microarray data showed that microRNA-224 (miR-224) was downregulated in human prostate cancer (PCa) tissues compared with adjacent benign tissues. However, the underlying mechanisms by which miR-224 is involved in PCa remain unclear. In this study, we identified TRIB1 as a target gene of miR-224. Forced expression of miR-224 suppressed PCa cell proliferation, invasion and migration, and promoted cell apoptosis by downregulating TRIB1. Moreover, the expression level of miR-224 in PCa tissues was negatively correlated with that of TRIB1. miR-224 downregulation was frequently found in PCa tissues with metastasis, higher PSA level and clinical stage, whereas TRIB1 upregulation was significantly associated with metastasis. Both miR-224 downregulation and TRIB1 upregulation were significantly associated with poor biochemical recurrence-free survival of patients with PCa. In conclusion, these findings reveal that the aberrant expression of miR-224 and TRIB1 may promote PCa progression and have potentials to serve as novel biomarkers for PCa prognosis.
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