© 2015 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license. Large-scale molecular annotation of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) indicates remarkable heterogeneity in the etiology of that disease. This diversity presents a significant obstacle against intervention target discovery. However, inactivation of miRNA biogenesis is commonly associated with advanced disease. Thus, restoration of miRNA activity may represent a common vulnerability among diverse EOC oncogenotypes. To test this, we employed genome-scale, gain-of-function, miRNA mimic toxicity screens in a large, diverse spectrum of EOC cell lines. We found that all cell lines responded to at least some miRNA mimics, but that the nature of the miRNA mimics provoking a response was highly selective within the panel. These selective toxicity profiles were leveraged to define modes of action and molecular response indicators for miRNA mimics with tumor-suppressive characteristics in vivo. A mechanistic principle emerging from this analysis was sensitivity of EOC to miRNA-mediated release of cell fate specification programs, loss of which may be a prerequisite for development of this disease.
CITATION STYLE
Shields, B. B., Pecot, C. V., Gao, H., McMillan, E., Potts, M., Nagel, C., … White, M. A. (2015). A genome‐scale screen reveals context‐dependent ovarian cancer sensitivity to mi RNA overexpression. Molecular Systems Biology, 11(12). https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20156308
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