miR-223 promotes colon cancer by directly targeting p120 catenin

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Abstract

microRNA (miRNA) dysregulation is frequently observed in colon cancer. Previous studies found that miR-223 is upregulated in colon cancer and functions as an oncogene. Conversely, p120 is often downregulated or even absent in colon cancer, and is a likely tumor suppressor. The present study showed that increased miR-223 and decreased p120 levels are associated with colon cancer malignancy, and p120 expression is negatively correlated with miR-223 expression. A dual luciferase reporter assay showed that miR-223 directly targets p120. miR-223 upregulation in a colon cancer cell line upregulated c-Myc, cyclinD1, MMP7, and vimentin expression, downregulated E-cadherin, increased nuclear expression of β-catenin, and enhanced RhoA activation. We suggest miR-223 may promote colon cancer cell invasion and metastasis by downregulating p120, thereby reducing intercellular adhesion, promoting RhoA activity, and activating β-catenin signaling. Thus miR-223 functions as an oncogene in colon cancer and may be a potential diagnostic and therapeutic target for anti-colon cancer treatment.

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Liu, L., Zhang, C., Li, X., Sun, W., Qin, S., Qin, L., & Wang, X. (2017). miR-223 promotes colon cancer by directly targeting p120 catenin. Oncotarget, 8(38), 63764–63779. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.19541

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