Mir-183-5p promotes hcc migration/invasion via increasing aerobic glycolysis

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Abstract

Background: The mortality and morbidity of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are still unacceptably high, despite decades of extensive studies. Aerobic glycolysis is a hallmark of cancer metabolism, closely relating to invasion and metastasis of HCC. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are involved in the regulation of aerobic glycolysis. miR-183-5p, an oncogenic miRNA, is highly expressed in HCC, but the regulatory mechanism of miR-183-5p in migration, invasion and aerobic glycolysis in HCC remains unclear. Purpose: To elucidate whether miR-183-5p affects aerobic glycolysis to regulate the migration and invasion of HCC, and to explore its regulatory mechanism. Methods: We attempted to observe the effects of miR-183-5p on the migration and invasion of HepG2 cells by a wound-healing assay and Transwell assays. The effect of miR-183-5p on glycolysis was determined by glucose uptake and lactate generation. Western blot and qPCR were used to detect the relevant proteins and miRNA expression. Results: Our results show that miR-183-5p promoted migration and invasion, enhanced glycolysis via increasing glucose uptake and lactate generation, and up-regulated glycolysis-related gene (PKM2, HK2, LDHA, GLUT1) expression in HepG2 cells. Further experiments indicated that miR-183-5p could decrease PTEN expression, but increased Akt, p-Akt and mTOR expression in HepG2 cells. Conclusion: These findings suggest that miR-183-5p may promote HCC migration and invasion via increasing aerobic glycolysis through targeting PTEN and then activating Akt/ mTOR signaling.

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Niu, Y., Liu, F., Wang, X., Chang, Y., Song, Y., Chu, H., … Chen, C. (2021). Mir-183-5p promotes hcc migration/invasion via increasing aerobic glycolysis. OncoTargets and Therapy, 14, 3649–3658. https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S304117

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