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MiRNA Genes Constitute New Targets for Microsatellite Instability in Colorectal Cancer

Authors :
Alex Duval
Richard C. Hamelin
Magali Svrcek
Jean-François Fléjou
Zoulira Abidi
Marie-Pierre Gaub
Nizar El-Murr
Kristell Wanherdrick
Thécla Lesuffleur
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 7, Iss 2, p e31862 (2012), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2012.

Abstract

Mismatch repair-deficient colorectal cancers (CRC) display widespread instability at DNA microsatellite sequences (MSI). Although MSI has been reported to commonly occur at coding repeats, leading to alterations in the function of a number of genes encoding cancer-related proteins, nothing is known about the putative impact of this process on non-coding microRNAs. In miRbase V15, we identified very few human microRNA genes with mono- or di-nucleotide repeats (n = 27). A mutational analysis of these sequences in a large series of MSI CRC cell lines and primary tumors underscored instability in 15 of the 24 microRNA genes successfully studied at variable frequencies ranging from 2.5% to 100%. Following a maximum likelihood statistical method, microRNA genes were separated into two groups that differed significantly in their mutation frequencies and in their tendency to represent mutations that may or may not be under selective pressures during MSI tumoral progression. The first group included 21 genes that displayed no or few mutations in CRC. The second group contained three genes, i.e., hsa-mir-1273c, hsa-mir-1303 and hsa-mir-567, with frequent (≥ 80%) and sometimes bi-allelic mutations in MSI tumors. For the only one expressed in colonic tissues, hsa-mir-1303, no direct link was found between the presence or not of mono- or bi-allelic alterations and the levels of mature miR expression in MSI cell lines, as determined by sequencing and quantitative PCR respectively. Overall, our results provide evidence that DNA repeats contained in human miRNA genes are relatively rare and preserved from mutations due to MSI in MMR-deficient cancer cells. Functional studies are now required to conclude whether mutated miRNAs, and especially the miR-1303, might have a role in MSI tumorigenesis.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68fff9ef44167029ec8c6da896f34a4c