Open Access

Potential role of miR-139-5p in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (Review)

  • Authors:
    • Ling‑Li Huang
    • Ling‑Wei Huang
    • Lei Wang
    • Ben‑Ding Tong
    • Qing Wei
    • Xuan‑Sheng Ding
  • View Affiliations

  • Published online on: June 8, 2017     https://doi.org/10.3892/ol.2017.6351
  • Pages: 1215-1222
  • Copyright: © Huang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution License.

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Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short non‑coding RNAs that regulate the expression of protein-coding genes by partially binding to specific target sites of mRNAs. miRNAs perform important functions in complicated cellular biological processes and their abnormal expression is involved in various disorders, including cancer. Among the miRNAs, differential expression of miR-139-5p serves a significant role in tumorigenesis, metastasis and recurrence, thus suggesting that it may potentially be used as a promising biomarker for cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy. miR‑139‑5p is expected to serve as a biomarker to eventually be implemented in a clinical setting. In the present review, we focus on the importance of miR-139-5p in cancer, summarize the association between miR‑139‑5p expression level and diagnosis and prognosis, and discuss the potential therapeutic implications for the future.

Introduction

MicroRNAs (miRNAs), a class of small, highly conserved, non-coding RNAs of ~22 nucleotides, regulate the expression of protein-coding genes (1,2). Lin-4 was initially discovered in Caenorhabditis elegans as a short non-coding RNA ~20 years ago, and was observed to be essential to regulate developmental timing as a heterochronic switch gene (3). Then, miR-15a and miR-16-1 were demonstrated to be tumor suppressors, which was the first association between miRNAs deregulation and cancer (4). These observations contributed to the additional investigation of underlying mechanisms. In general, mature miRNAs negatively regulate their gene targets by binding to specific target sites within the 3′-untranslated region (UTR) of mRNAs for either translation repression or degradation (5). The interaction between miRNAs and mRNAs is complex: A single miRNA has multiple targets mRNAs, while a single mRNA has multiple conserved target sites for miRNA binding (6,7).

Previously, much attention was paid to these miRNAs in cancers (811). For instance, miR-27a is involved in activating the expression of P-glycoprotein in ovarian cancer, and is therefore indirectly associated with drug susceptibility (8); miR-21 expression has a direct correlation with tumor invasion and metastasis (9); miR-139-5p serves a role in inhibiting tumor metastasis and progression in colorectal cancer (CRC) (10) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (11). This previous research has provided evidence of the association between miRNA abnormality and cancer. miRNAs perform important functions in diverse cellular biological processes, including proliferation, apoptosis, migration and invasion (12,13).

miR-139-5p aberration is observed to be a frequent event in various disorders, including cancer. miR-139-5p was first characterized in neurodegeneration, and it was observed to be downregulated during the disease processes (5). Subsequently, miR-139-5p was identified to be responsible for cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (14,15). miR-139-5p has been investigated in various types of human cancer, including head and neck/oral cancer (HNOC) (7), breast cancer, gastric cancer (14), endometrial serous adenocarcinomas (16), CRC (17), bladder cancer (18), HCC (19), ovarian cancer (20), esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) (21,22), thyroid carcinomas (23), glioblastoma (24), basal cell carcinoma (25), renal cell carcinoma (RCC) (26), laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC) (27), non-small cell lung cancer (28) and pancreatic cancer (29). Previous researches indicated that miR-139-5p is widely recognized as a tumor suppressor (1629). Recently, however, miR-139-5p was identified to inhibit preadipocyte differentiation by targeting notch homolog 1 (NOTCH1), and insulin receptor substrate 1 (30), and to negatively regulate myoblast proliferation and differentiation by suppressing the Wnt1-mediated Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway (31). These results provided a potential therapeutic target of obesity, associated metabolic diseases (30) and myogenesis (31). In addition, miR-139-5p was demonstrated to exhibit an inverse correlation with receptor membrane component 1 (PGRMC1) in granulosa cells (32). All of these results indicate that miR-139-5p may be of crucial importance to cancer and other diseases.

miRNAs are stably expressed in human plasma and serum and easily measured in blood samples, making them good candidates for the non-invasive detection of disease; thus miR-139-5p may be a novel endogenous control for cancer (33,34). Subsequently, the inherent regulatory function of miRNAs makes it likely that numerous miRNAs expressed in tumors may influence the biological behavior and clinical phenotype of the tumor (34). Furthermore, identification of miRNAs may be a more suitable and viable cost-effective alternative compared with other expensive commercial immunohistochemical profiling techniques (35). Considering these superiorities of miRNAs, miR-139-5p may be a promising biomarker in clinical practice.

A number of studies have identified that miR-139-5p serves a significant role in cancer biology, diagnosis, prognosis and therapy. As summarized in a previous review, miR-139-5p is involved in diverse biological processes and miRNA-regulated protein interaction networks (36). Increasing our understanding of the miRNA-mRNA regulatory mechanisms may also provide a novel individual-based therapeutic strategy (17). In the present review, we focus on the importance of miR-139-5p in cancer, summarize the association between miR-139-5p expression level and diagnosis and prognosis, and discuss the potential therapeutic implications for the future.

The biology of miR-139-5p

miR-139 is located within the second intron of the phosphodiesterase 2A gene on chromosome 11q13.4 (37,38), and miR-139-5p is a common type of mature miRNA generated from a miR-139 precursor (39). Similar to the biogenesis of other miRNAs, the miR-139 gene is transcribed by the RNA polymerase II to produce a long RNA molecule, primary-miR-139 (pri-miR-139) in the nucleus. The primary transcript is similar to protein-coding mRNAs with a 5′7-methylguanosine cap and poly-adenylated at the 3′end. Subsequently, pri-miR-139 is processed into a hairpin-shaped stem-loop precursor (pre-miR-139) by the action of a RNase III endonucclease, Drosha and a cofactor, DGCR8/Pasha (7,13). Pre-miR-139 is additionally cleaved in the cytoplasm by Dicer, a second RNase III endonuclease. Subsequently, two mature forms of miR-139 are formed: miR-139-3p processed from the 3′arm and miR-139-5p processed from the 5′arm of the stem loop sequence (39). Mature miRNAs are incorporated into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) and guide the RISC to binding 3′-UTR of the target gene mRNA, leading to the degradation or translational inhibition of target mRNA (13,40). Consistent with this, miR-139-5p target sites were observed to be located in the 3′-UTR of targeted mRNA in a number of previous studies (26,39). However, it is notable that complementarity between the miRNA and its target site on the mRNA is partial. Therefore, there is the possibility for a single miRNA to regulate hundreds of potential targets (5,41).

Notably, miR-139-5p and miR-139-3p expression profiles and levels vary in various types of cancer. For example, miR-139-5p and miR-139-3p were observed to be downregulated in tumor tissues compared with non-tumor tissues. However, miR-139-5p expression was gradually reduced during the development of CRC, while the expression of miR-139-3p demonstrated no significant difference in the various tumor stages of CRC (10). Furthermore, miR-139-3p was undetectable in HCC and adjacent non-tumor tissues (42). Abnormality of miR-139-5p is more common and significant than miR-139-3p expression in cancer, and demonstrates preferable research value and widely applicable prospects in clinical practice.

miR-139-5p in cancer diagnosis

Accurate and reliable results of diagnosis serve a critical role in guiding treatment and estimating prognosis. However, the present classification of certain types of cancer according to available clinical markers remains unreliable (43). As numerous tumors are not diagnosed until the disease is at the advanced stages, there is an urgent need to search for highly sensitive and minimally invasive biomarkers for diagnosis. Several years of experiments have demonstrated the potential role of miR-139-5p as a biomarker for screening and detection in tumors (21,26,40,44). Clinicopathological analysis proved that downregulation of miR-139-5p was associated significantly with aggressive pathological features, including advanced tumor stages (P<0.001), presence of venous invasion (P=0.002) and tumor microsatellite formation (P=0.014), absence of tumor encapsulation (P=0.005), and poorer tumor cellular differentiation (Edmondson grade III/IV) (P=0.005) in HCC (42). Therefore, miR-139-5p could potentially be used as a screening tool to identify individuals who would benefit from additional diagnostic assessment.

Differential expression of miR-139-5p has been observed between cancer patients and healthy individuals. For example, miR-139-5p was reported to be expressed at lower levels in breast cancer samples vs. healthy controls (35,44,45). Mammography, now as the standard screening tool worldwide for early breast cancer, has certain limitations (44). miR-139-5p may be useful to improve early detection of breast cancer. In addition, miR-139-5p expression was significantly reduced in bladder cancer cell lines compared with normal human bladder epithelium (P<0.0001) (18). Another study confirmed the downregulation of miR-139-5p in malignant bladder tissue samples (P<0.0001) (46).

ESCC is generally diagnosed at the terminal stages. Reduced levels of miR-139-5p at this stage of ESCC imply a latent capacity to improve early diagnosis (22). Conditional logistic regression analysis has demonstrated a close correlation between reduced miR-139-5p expression and increased risk for esophageal cancer (odds ratio=2.024) (21). miR-139-5p expression levels were significantly depleted in patients with lymph node metastasis compared to those without lymph node metastasis (P=0.040) (21), which may indicate be value for differential diagnosis. Furthermore, miR-139 expression demonstrated a significant decrease during HCC progression from normal liver to late-stage HCC when samples were categorized into 5 groups: Normal livers and those with no background liver disease, non-tumorous livers with chronic hepatitis, non-tumorous livers with cirrhosis, early HCC, and advanced HCC (42). Additionally, the expression of miR-139 was reduced along with the progression of primary to metastatic LSCC (27). Thus, miR-139-5p may be a novel marker to reflect the development of tumors.

miR-139-5p is involved in breast cancer, bladder cancer, ESCC, HCC, LSCC and others (2023,29); it is supposed to be used for molecular diagnosis of these forms (29). miR-139-5p may be helpful to decrease misdiagnosis rates and judge correctly the stage of cancer according to the reduced extent of miR-139-5p expression. More notably, quantitative polymerase chain reaction molecular testing is sensitive and powerful (35), and exosome-based diagnostic techniques have the potential for high reproducibility and require only a blood sampe, without any damage to patients (47). Besides, miR-139-5p appears to be a feasible and inexpensive marker for cancer diagnosis.

miR-139-5p in cancer prognosis

Enhancement of migration and invasion, as phenotypes of cell transformation, are involved in the process of metastasis of cancer cells (48), thus making it essential for improved stratification of cancer patients to predict disease recurrence risk and to guide therapy (17). Pathological features including tumor size, stage, grade, lymph-node metastasis, vascular invasion and metastasis are prognotic factors, but do not reflect the status of tumor progression and treatment efficacy (49). Therefore, a number of studies have indicated that the expression of miR-139 may act as an independent prognostic factor that is significantly associated with overall survival rates of cancer patients.

To investigate the mechanism by which miR-139-5p exerts anti-metastatic functions in cancer, the online resources miRanda (http://www.microrna.org/microrna/home.do), TargetScan (http://www.targetscan.org//vert_50/seedmatch.html), and PicTar (http://pictar.mdc-berlin.de/) were used to predict potential miR-139 targets (48,50). miR-139-5p possible targets, including topoisomerase II α (TOP2a), insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF-1R), Rho-kinase 2 (ROCK2), are involved in cancer progression and metastasis.

There is evidence that loss of miR-139-5p expression indirectly increases cell proliferation and inhibits apoptosis (Fig. 1), and exerts positive effects on the occurrence and progression of tumors. A previous study indicated that IGF-1R, ROCK2 and Ras-related protein 1 B (RAP1B) are involved in the same mechanism of miRNA-mediated regulation, regulating each other in a miR-139-5p-dependent manner in CRC (38). Overexpression of RAP1B, tetraspanin 5 (TSPAN5) and forkhead box protein O1in (FOXO1A) CRC may result from the underexpression of miR-139 (50). As a critical mediator of the miR-139 anti-proliferative effect in cell lines, RAP1B encodes a member of the Ras super family of G-proteins (50) and negatively accommodates the activity of p38 mitogen-activate protein kinase signaling (51). miR-139-5p is able to cause aberrant cell cycle arrest in G0/G1 phase (P<0.01), with upregulation of two cyclin dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors, p21Cip1/Waf1 and p27Kip1 (52), which inhibit the activity of cyclin D-CDK2/4 complexes, therefore inhibiting E2F transcriptional activity and cell cycle progression to S-phase (53). Apoptosis is concomitant with cell cycle arrest induced by miR-139-5p. The extrinsic apoptosis pathway is initiated by the binding of extracellular death ligands, including tumor necrosis factor α, to transmembrane death receptors, inducing aggregation of adaptor proteins, including Fas-associated death domain protein, which in turn promotes activation of apoptosis executors caspase-8, caspase-3 and caspase-7 to initiate the proteolytic cleavage of nuclear poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase, thus causing loss of DNA repair, cellular disassembly and apoptosis (52). miR-139-5p was identified as a tumor suppressor inhibiting cell proliferation, migration and invasion in lung cancer, partially via downregulating IGF-1R expression (28). Positive correlations between IGF-IR/matrix metallopeptidase-2 (MMP-2) expression and negative correlations between MMP-2/miR-139 expression were also observed in primary CRC tissues, indicating that miR-139 may inhibit IGF-IR expression and downregulate MMP-2 synthesis via MEK/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)/nuclear factor (NF)-κB signaling (10).

Overexpression of miR-139-5p is able to inhibit cell migration and invasion in vitro and metastasis in vivo. Fig. 2 summarizes the signaling pathways of miR-139 that suppress cell migration and invasion. Endogenous autocrine motility factor receptor (AMFR) and NOTCH1 protein levels were decreased in miR-139-5p-overexpressing CRC cells and could be restored in miR-139-5p-depleted cells (54). Autocrine motility factor (AMF) has been demonstrated to stimulate endothelial motility and to function as an angiogenic factor (55). The ligand of AMF, AMFR, also known as gp78, is able to target itself for proteasomal degradation in a RING finger- and MmUBC7-dependent manner (55), resulting in signaling cascades relying on protein kinase C and activating Ras homolog (Rho)-like GTPase, Rho gene family, member A and Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1, thereby enhancing cell motility (56). Activation of AMFR by AMF has been demonstrated to alter cell adhesion, motility and angiogenesis (57). NOTCH1 was observed to be directly regulated by miR-139-5p at the post-transcriptional level and promoted CRC invasion; in addition, significant association was observed between NOTCH1 expression and survival (54). In accordance with previous findings, ectopic expression of miR-139-5p significantly suppressed oncogenic NOTCH1 downstream effectors, including hairy and enhancer of split-1, cyclin D1 and Fas-associated protein with death domain-like apoptosis regulator transcription (52). Furthermore, miR-139-5p inhibited cellular migration and invasion through the inhibition of MMP7 and MMP9 (52). miR-139 was inferred to be a key tumor suppressor in early CRC development by targeting ETS1 (58). Therefore, miR-139-5p has the possibility to serve as a molecular therapeutic target and prognostic marker.

Expression levels of miR-139-5p in HCC tissues and cell lines were significantly reduced compared to control groups in a number of previous studies (59,60). A previous study demonstrated that knockdown of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) suppressed HCC motility in vitro and pulmonary metastasis in a nude mouse model, and EZH2 was hypothesized to promote cancer metastasis through tumor suppressor miR-139-5p by effectively and extensively regulating a variety of signaling pathways, particularly those involved in cell motility and metastasis (59). Another previous study revealed that ROCK2 served a significant role in HCC migration, invasion and progression (60). Furthermore, miR-139 was identified to suppress HCC cell migration in vitro and pulmonary metastasis in vivo by targeting the prometastatic protein ROCK2 in the Rho-dependent actin cytoskeleton remodeling signaling pathway (42). Mechanistic investigation revealed that overexpression of miR-139 inhibits cell proliferation and invasion through suppressing β-catenin/T-cell factor-4 (TCF-4) transcriptional activity, lessening the relative expression of β-catenin, cyclin D1, c-Myc, MMP-2 and MMP-9 (11). miR-139-5p was confirmed to negatively regulate Zinc finger E-box binding homeobox1 (ZEB1) and ZEB2 expression (61). ZEB1 and ZEB2 contain two C2H2-type zinc fingers that mediate their binding to paired CAGGTA/GE-box-like promoter elements, and function as transcriptional repressors (62). These repressors induce epithelial mesenchymal transition by suppressing the expression of E-cadherin and contribute to the progression of malignant cancer (63).

Activated protein-1, a heterodimeric transcription activator, is composed of c-Jun and c-Fos to regulate the expression of genes essential for cell proliferation and differentiation (48). Jun was reported to be in the center of target-pathway and target-function networks (64). A previous study indicated that miR-139 was able to inhibit Jun expression by targeting a conserved site on its 3′-UTR, and in turn Jun was able to induce miR-139 expression in a dose-dependent manner via a distant upstream regulatory element, thus forming a negative feedback loop to fine-tune tissue homeostasis (64). c-Fos has also been reported to be an oncogene involved in HCC metastasis (65,66). In vitro cell migration analysis demonstrated that depletion of c-Fos or overexpression of miR-139 in HCC cell sublines transfected with miR-139 mimics reduced cell migration, whereas overexpression of c-Fos or depletion of miR-139 in HCC cell sublines transfected with miR-139 inhibitor increased cell migration (67). These findings imply that miR-139-5p is closely associated with the development and metastasis of malignant tumors, therefore it may be an independent prognostic predictor for HCC.

TOP2a, known as a gene encoding an enzyme involved in transforming DNA topology, including chromosome condensation, chromatid separation and the relief of torsional stress occurring in transcription and replication (20), was identified to be a target of miR-139-5p in breast cancer, and may mediate transcriptional activation function of E2F3 to control the rate of cell proliferation (68). H2A histone family member V, HRAS, NF-κB1, phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit α, RAF and RhoT1 were also shown to be targets of miR-139-5p underlying cellular processes involved in metastasis in breast cancer (35,69). A significant functional role has been suggested for miR-139-5p in breast cancer cell motility and invasion, and it has potential to be used as a prognostic marker for aggressive forms of breast cancer (69).

miR-139-5p exerts a growth- and invasiveness-suppressing function in human ESCCs by targeting the oncogenic nuclear receptor subfamily 5 group A member 2 (NR5A2) (21). NR5A2, also known as liver receptor homolog-1, enhances cell cycle progression through the G1 phase and cell proliferation by inducing the expression of cyclins D1 and E1, and prevents cells from apoptosis (70,71). A previous study demonstrated that its overexpression resulted in the post-translational truncation of E-cadherin and increased expression of MMP-9 (72), consequently contributing to cancer motility and invasion.

Notably, hyaluronic acid has been reported to downregulate miR-139-5p expression via histone deacetylation (32), and hyaluronic acid is involved in cell migration, proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis (73,74). miR-139-5p was demonstrated to promote apoptosis and inhibit functioning of granulosa cells by regulating the expression of progesterone receptor membrane component (PGRMC) 1 (32), which is able to participate in P4 signaling transduction in the reproductive system and mediates the anti-apoptotic effects of P4 on granulosa cells (75). Furthermore, it was reported that PGRMC1 regulates cell viability through increasing protein kinase G activity and suppressing ERK1/2 activity, as well as decreasing intracellular free calcium levels (75) and activating enzymatic activity of cytochrome P450 involved in sterol biosynthesis (76).

By contrast, miR-139-5p expression was upregulated by >20-fold in pancreatic cancer endothelial cells compared with normal endothelial cells, which may be due to cell type-specific differences (29). In addition, miR-139 demonstrated a positive impact on endothelial cell migration and vasculature formation during angiogenesis (29). Angiogenesis is an important step in the development of tumors and is necessary for primary tumor growth, invasion and metastasis. miR-139 is of potential therapeutic value for suppression of tumor invasion and metastasis by inhibiting angiogenesis (77,78). The study revealed that miR-139-5p overexpression may assist with the spread of cancer, while others have demonstrated its inhibition of expansion and metastasis (29).

Univariate analysis demonstrated that reduced expression of miR-139-5p was significantly correlated with shorter overall survival time (log-rank test, P=0.043) in patients with endometrial serous adenocarcinoma (16). Additional studies demonstrated that miR-139 reduced expression of C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4 (CXCR4), and CXCR4 was directly targeted by miR-139 in LSCC (27) and gastric cancer (79). miR-139-5p is also associated with metastasis and prognosis of clear cell RCC (26). However, additional research in this field is required to investigate the mechanisms and clinical potential of miR-139-5p.

The data discussed in this section indicate the tumor-suppressive role of miR-139-5p reflecting the status of tumor growth and spread; therefore, miR-139-5p may be a possible therapeutic target and prognosticator of cancer. Based on the results of previous studies, it appears that miR-139-5p serves as a pivotal mediator in regulation of progression and metastasis. miR-139-5p may have substantial clinical significance and implications in the clinical setting, but additional research is required to indicate the critical role of miR-139-5p in the prognosis of various types of cancer.

miR-139-5p in cancer therapy

Availability of potent prognostic and predictive factors serves a crucial function for clinical decisions on cancer treatment, guiding patient decision-making and the selection of a therapeutic schedule (80). miR-139-5p may serve as a tumor suppressor and is significantly downregulated in various types of cancer, including HNOC (7), breast cancer (45,81) and gastric cancer (79). Furthermore, the miR-139-5p expression signature has been reported to be associated with the clinical outcome of cancer patients (82,83), and may serve as a therapeutic target for novel strategies for prevention and therapy.

A study identified that Mcl-1 is one of meaningful targets of miR-139 in glioblastoma (24). Mcl-1 serves as an anti-apoptotic factor, preserves mitochondrial membrane integrity by binding to mitochondrial porin channels (82) and protects mitochondria by sequestering proapoptotic B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2) family members, Bcl-2 associated X, apoptosis regulator and Bcl-2 antagonist/killer (84), thus inhibiting initiation of apoptosis and conferring a survival advantage to tumor cells. In addition, it has been reported that miR-139 suppresses proliferation and enhances apoptosis in coordination with an anticancer drug temozolomide via negative regulation of Mcl-1 in glioma (24). Notably, Mcl-1 has also been reported to mediate resistance to rituximab in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (83) and enhance the efficacy of rituximab therapy (82), further supporting Mcl-1 as a viable therapeutic target for the treatment of cancer.

As a recombinant monoclonal antibody to human epidermal growth factor (HER2), trastuzumab is among the most successful therapeutics for metastatic breast cancer (85). Bao et al (79) demonstrated in gastric cancer that trastuzumab treatment restores the expression of a CXCR4-targeted miRNA, miR-139, which is suppressed by upstream HER2 signaling.

The results in two clinical studies revealed that miR-139 was significantly downregulated in early cancer pathological stages compared with adjacent non-cancerous tissues, and it remained at a very low expression level in advanced pathological stages (58,86). Subsequently, it was indicated that miR-139 was able to directly suppress ETS1 activity via the conserved binding site (58). ETS1 is an oncogenic transcription factor, and is able to promote cell cycle G1/S transition by transcriptionally upregulating the cyclin E and CDK2 genes, the master regulators of G1/S-phase transition (87).

Whether Mcl-1, CXCR4 and ETS1 are involved in sensitization of cancer cells to anticancer drugs remains to be determined. miR-139-5p targeting represents a plausible therapeutic approach (Table I). Increasing the level of miR-139-5p in tumor cells using chemically synthesized oligonucleotides or artificially engineered expression vectors may suppress cancer cell proliferation through the regulation of endogenous targets of miR-139-5p (50). Furthermore, apoptosis resistance is an important characteristic of tumor cells (24). Consequently, extrinsic induction of apoptosis has been considered to be an important antitumor mechanism. Therapeutic interventions that simultaneously target these targets, such as Mcl-1, CXCR4 and ETS1, and restore tumor suppressor miR-139-5p may lead to improved treatments for aggressive malignancies. In addition, considerable studies of the underlying molecular mechanisms will be necessary to additionally investigate putative miR-139-5p targets and elucidate the role of miR-139-5p as a tumor inhibitor.

Table I.

Abnormal expression and target genes of miR-139-5p in different types of cancers.

Table I.

Abnormal expression and target genes of miR-139-5p in different types of cancers.

Cancer typemiR-139-5p expressionTarget gene(Refs.)
Head and neck/oral cancerDownregulatedUnknown(6,7)
Breast cancerDownregulatedTOP2a, H2AFV, HRAS, RAF, NFKB1, PIK3CA, RHOT1(20,35,69)
Gastric cancerDownregulatedCXCR4, c-Jun(79)
Endometrial serous adenocarcinomaDownregulatedUnknown(16)
Colorectal cancerDownregulatedIGF-1R, ROCK2, RAP1B, TSPAN5, FOXO1A, TNFα, Fas, AMFR, NOTCH1, ETS1(38,48,50,52,53,56)
Bladder cancerDownregulatedUnknown(18)
Hepatocellular carcinomaDownregulatedEZH2, ROCK2, ZEB1/2, c-Fos(5759,6365)
Ovarian cancerDownregulatedTOP2a, RACGAP1, DNAH9, E2F3(20)
Esophageal squamous cell carcinomaDownregulatedNR5A2(21,22)
Thyroid carcinomaDownregulatedUnknown(23)
GlioblastomaDownregulatedMcl-1(24)
Basal cell carcinomaDownregulatedUnknown(25)
Renal cell carcinomaDownregulatedUnknown(26)
Lung squamous cell carcinomaDownregulatedCXCR4(27)
Non-small cell lung cancerDownregulatedIGF-1R(28)
Pancreatic cancerUpregulatedUnknown(29)
Granulosa cell tumorUpregulatedPGRMC1(32)

[i] miR, microRNA.

Conclusion and prospects

In the present review, we focused on the differential expression of miR-139-5p in numerous types of cancer and its potential role in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy. Downregulation of miR-139-5p may be measured and used to accurately assess cancer condition, leading to evaluation of prognosis and guiding of appropriate therapy. Restoring the expression of miR-139-5p exerts tumor suppression mediated by targets of miR-139-5p through regulating proliferation, apoptosis, migration and invasion of cancer cells. However, it should be noted that loss of expression of miR-139-5p may prevent cancerous tumor growth by halting the formation of new blood vessels needed for tumor growth and extension. It may be hypothesized that miR-139-5p can serve as a biomarker to be implemented in a clinical setting. Though research into miR-139-5p has provided insight into our knowledge of human cancer, the molecular mechanisms underlying metastatic migration and invasion are only partially understood and require additional investigation.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the pharmacologists of Jiangsu Cancer Hospital, Jiangsu Institute of Cancer Research, Nanjing Medical University Affiliated Cancer Hospital (Nanjing, China), for their helpful advice and comments on the manuscript.

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Volume 14 Issue 2

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Spandidos Publications style
Huang LL, Huang LW, Wang L, Tong BD, Wei Q and Ding XS: Potential role of miR-139-5p in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (Review). Oncol Lett 14: 1215-1222, 2017
APA
Huang, L., Huang, L., Wang, L., Tong, B., Wei, Q., & Ding, X. (2017). Potential role of miR-139-5p in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (Review). Oncology Letters, 14, 1215-1222. https://doi.org/10.3892/ol.2017.6351
MLA
Huang, L., Huang, L., Wang, L., Tong, B., Wei, Q., Ding, X."Potential role of miR-139-5p in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (Review)". Oncology Letters 14.2 (2017): 1215-1222.
Chicago
Huang, L., Huang, L., Wang, L., Tong, B., Wei, Q., Ding, X."Potential role of miR-139-5p in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy (Review)". Oncology Letters 14, no. 2 (2017): 1215-1222. https://doi.org/10.3892/ol.2017.6351