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Loss of MicroRNA Helps Power Cancer

By R&D Editors | July 9, 2012

Loss of a particular microRNA in chronic lymphocytic leukemia shuts down normal cell metabolism and turns up alternative mechanisms that enable cancer cells to produce the energy and build the molecules they need to proliferate and to invade neighboring tissue.

The findings come from a new study led by researchers at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James).

The study shows that microRNA-125b (miR-125b) by itself regulates many enzymes and other molecules that allow cells to make building blocks required for their growth and proliferation such as DNA, and lipids needed for cell membranes.

It also shows that miR-125b is often lost in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), and that the loss is associated with higher rates of glucose metabolism. This is a characteristic of cancer cells called the Warburg effect, and it alters how cancer cells use sugar (glucose) to generate energy. This finding suggests that loss of miR-125b is an early step in CLL development.

The findings, published in the journal Blood, provide a more comprehensive understanding of how cancer develops and identifies new potential targets for CLL drug development, the researchers say.

“Our findings indicate that miR-125b is downregulated in both aggressive and indolent forms of CLL, and that this downregulation is associated with metabolic adaptation to cancer transformation,” says principal investigator and corresponding author Dr. Carlo Croce, director of Ohio State’s Human Cancer Genetics program and a member of the OSUCCC – James Molecular Biology and Cancer Genetics program.

“By identifying the metabolites that are changed, as we have here, we can propose to use drugs that target them and perhaps control the leukemia,” Croce says.

Scientists have known for some time that, as normal cells become cancer cells, different metabolic pathways are switched on and support the enhanced growth and energy needs that malignant cells require. This study reveals one new way that that can happen.

“The power of microRNAs is that they simultaneously control the expression of many genes, usually by suppressing them,” says co-corresponding author Esmerina Tili, who is also first author and a post-doctoral researcher in Croce’s laboratory.

“We believe miR-125b is a master regulator of cell metabolism, and that its loss enhances metabolism and leads to a transformed state,” Tili says. “As the level of miR-125b goes down in CLL cells, the levels of many of the molecules it controls go up, enabling rapid cell growth.”

These molecules, along with miR-125b itself, warrant further investigation as possible targets for new drugs to control CLL progression, she says.

“Cancer is a complex disease,” Croce says. “The more we know about the changes that occur when cells become malignant, the better therapies we can design.”

Funding from the NIH/National Cancer Institute (grant CA151319) supported this research.

Other researchers involved in this study were Zhenghua Luo and Stefano Volinia of The Ohio State University; Jean-Jacques Michaille of Université de Bourgogne, Faculté Gabriel, Dijon, France, who has regularly conducted research at Ohio State University since 2005; and Laura Z. Rassenti and Thomas J. Kipps of Moores Universary of California San Diego Cancer Center.

Date: July 5, 2012
Source: Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center

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