MiR-200b regulates autophagy associated with chemoresistance in human lung adenocarcinoma

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Abstract

Chemoresistance remains a major clinical problem in combating human lung adenocarcinoma (LAD), and abnormal autophagy is closely associated with this phenomenon. In the present study, an inverse correlation between miR-200b and autophagy-associated gene 12 (ATG12) expressions was observed in docetaxelresistant (SPC-A1/DTX and H1299/DTX) and sensitive (SPC-A1 and H1299) LAD cells as well as in tissue samples. Further study showed that miR-200b directly targeted ATG12 in LAD. Moreover, miR-200b-dependent ATG12 downregulation inhibited autophagy and enhanced the chemosensitivity of SPC-A1/DTX and H1299/DTX cells both in vivo and in vitro. LAD chemoresistance is therefore closely related to downregulation of miR-200b and the corresponding upregulation of ATG12. These results provide new evidence for the mechanisms governing the microRNA (miRNA)-ATG12 network and their possible contribution to autophagy modulation and LAD chemoresistance.

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Pan, B., Feng, B., Chen, Y., Huang, G., Wang, R., Chen, L., & Song, H. (2015). MiR-200b regulates autophagy associated with chemoresistance in human lung adenocarcinoma. Oncotarget, 6(32), 32805–32820. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.5352

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