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MiR-3687 Overexpression Promotes Bladder Cancer Cell Growth by Inhibiting the Negative Effect of FOXP1 on Cyclin E2 Transcription.


ABSTRACT: Cyclin E2, a member of the cyclin family, is a key cell cycle-related protein. This protein plays essential roles in cancer progression, and, as such, an inhibitor of cyclin E2 has been approved to treat several types of cancers. Even so, mechanisms underlying how to regulate cyclin E2 expression in cancer remain largely unknown. In the current study, miR-3687 was upregulated in clinical bladder cancer (BC) tumor tissues, The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database, and human BC cell lines. Inhibition of miR-3687 expression significantly reduced human BC cell proliferation in vitro and tumor growth in vivo, which coincided with the induction of G0/G1 cell cycle arrest and downregulation of cyclin E2 protein expression. Interestingly, overexpression of cyclin E2 reversed the inhibition of BC proliferation induced by miR-3687. Mechanistic studies suggested that miR-3687 binds to the 3' UTR of foxp1 mRNA, downregulates FOXP1 protein expression, and in turn promotes the transcription of cyclin E2, thereby promoting the growth of BC cells. Collectively, the current study not only establishes a novel regulatory axis of miR-3687/FOXP1 regarding regulation of cyclin E2 expression in BC cells, but also provides strong suggestive evidence that miR-3687 and FOXP1 may be promising targets in therapeutic strategies for human BC.

SUBMITTER: Xie Q 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6520336 | biostudies-literature | 2019 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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miR-3687 Overexpression Promotes Bladder Cancer Cell Growth by Inhibiting the Negative Effect of FOXP1 on Cyclin E2 Transcription.

Xie Qipeng Q   Chen Caiyi C   Li Haiying H   Xu Jiheng J   Wu Lei L   Yu Yuan Y   Ren Shuwei S   Li Hongyan H   Hua Xiaohui X   Yan Huiying H   Rao Dapang D   Zhang Huxiang H   Jin Honglei H   Huang Haishan H   Huang Chuanshu C  

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 20190315 5


Cyclin E2, a member of the cyclin family, is a key cell cycle-related protein. This protein plays essential roles in cancer progression, and, as such, an inhibitor of cyclin E2 has been approved to treat several types of cancers. Even so, mechanisms underlying how to regulate cyclin E2 expression in cancer remain largely unknown. In the current study, miR-3687 was upregulated in clinical bladder cancer (BC) tumor tissues, The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database, and human BC cell lines. Inhibiti  ...[more]

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