Tumor suppression by miR-26 overrides potential oncogenic activity in intestinal tumorigenesis

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Abstract

Down-regulation of miR-26 family members has been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple malignancies. In some settings, including glioma, however, miR-26-mediated repression ofPTENpromotes tumorigenesis. To investigate the contexts in which the tumor suppressor versus oncogenic activity of miR-26 predominates in vivo, we generated miR-26a transgenic mice. Despite measureable repression ofPten, elevated miR-26a levels were not associated with malignancy in transgenic animals. We documented reduced miR-26 expression in human colorectal cancer and, accordingly, showed that miR-26a expression potently suppressed intestinal adenoma formation in Apcmin/+ mice, a model known to be sensitive to Ptendosage. These studies reveal a tumor suppressor role for miR-26 in intestinal cancer that overrides putative oncogenic activity, highlighting the therapeutic potential of miR-26 delivery to this tumor type.

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Zeitels, L. R., Acharya, A., Shi, G., Chivukula, D., Chivukula, R. R., Anandam, J. L., … Mendell, J. T. (2014). Tumor suppression by miR-26 overrides potential oncogenic activity in intestinal tumorigenesis. Genes and Development, 28(23), 2585–2590. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.250951.114

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