Nanoliposomal delivery of microrna-203 suppresses migration of triple-negative breast cancer through distinct target suppression

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Abstract

Triple-negative breast cancers affect thousands of women in the United States and dispro-portionately drive mortality from breast cancer. MicroRNAs are small, non-coding RNAs that negatively regulate gene expression post-transcriptionally by inhibiting target mRNA translation or by promoting mRNA degradation. We have identified that miRNA-203, silenced by epithelial–mesen-chymal transition (EMT), is a tumor suppressor and can promote differentiation of breast cancer stem cells. In this study, we tested the ability of liposomal delivery of miR-203 to reverse aspects of breast cancer pathogenesis using breast cancer and EMT cell lines. We show that translationally relevant methods for increasing miR-203 abundance within a target tissue affects cellular properties associated with cancer progression. While stable miR-203 expression suppresses LASP1 and survivin, nanoliposomal delivery suppresses BMI1, indicating that suppression of distinct mRNA target profiles can lead to loss of cancer cell migration.

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Song, S., Johnson, K. S., Lujan, H., Pradhan, S. H., Sayes, C. M., & Taube, J. H. (2021). Nanoliposomal delivery of microrna-203 suppresses migration of triple-negative breast cancer through distinct target suppression. Non-Coding RNA, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/ncrna7030045

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