miR-21-mediated radioresistance occurs via promoting repair of DNA double strand breaks

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Abstract

miR-21, as an oncogene that overexpresses in most human tumors, is involved in radioresistance; however, the mechanism remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that miR-21-mediated radioresistance occurs through promoting repair of DNA double strand breaks, which includes facilitating both non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination repair (HRR). The miR-21-promoted NHEJ occurs through targeting GSK3B (a novel target of miR-21), which affects the CRY2/PP5 pathway and in turn increases DNA-PKcs activity. The miR-21-promoted HRR occurs through targeting both GSK3B and CDC25A (a known target of miR-21), which neutralizes the effects of targeting GSK3B-induced CDC25A increase because GSK3B promotes degradation of both CDC25A and cyclin D1, but CDC25A and cyclin D1 have an opposite effect on HRR. A negative correlation of expression levels between miR-21 and GSK3β exists in a subset of human tumors. Our results not only elucidate miR-21-mediated radioresistance, but also provide potential new targets for improving radiotherapy.

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Hu, B., Wang, X., Hu, S., Ying, X., Wang, P., Zhang, X., … Wang, Y. (2017). miR-21-mediated radioresistance occurs via promoting repair of DNA double strand breaks. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 292(8), 3531–3540. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.772392

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