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A novel regulatory loop miR-101/ANXA2/EGR1 mediates malignant characteristics of liver cancer stem cells

Sai Ma, Junping Cheng, Haiyan Wang, Ningling Ding, Feng Zhou, Ru-Ning Ji, Li Zhu, Chuanwu Zhu, Yunzhi Pan

2020Carcinogenesis46 citationsDOI

Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that liver cancer stem cells (LCSCs) are the cellular determinants that promote tumor recurrence and metastases. Aberrantly expressed miRNAs were identified in LCSCs and found to play a significant role in modulating biological characteristics of LCSCs. In this study, we implemented miRNA microarrays in CD133+ LCSCs and found miR-101 expression was downregulated. Increasing miR-101 expression repressed the metastasis and tumorigenic potential in LCSCs. Further investigations showed that ANXA2 was a novel target of miR-101. And we revealed that ANXA2 plays a critical role in acceleration of cell cycle and enhancing the migration and invasion abilities of LCSCs. Elevated ANXA2 increased activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) which regulated SOX2 and cell cycle-related kinases. Moreover, ERK phosphorylation inhibited the expression of early growth response 1 (EGR1) which in turn restrained the transcription of miR-101. In vivo experiments, overexpression of miR-101 produced potent inhibitory effects on the growth of LCSCs xenograft tumors as well as ANXA2 knockdown. Taken together, our findings suggest a novel regulatory loop miR-101/ANXA2/EGR1 in LCSCs and may serve as potential therapeutic targets in liver cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Stem cellBiologyCancer researchGene knockdownMAPK/ERK pathwayKinaseCancer stem cellSOX2microRNAMetastasisTranscription factorCancerCell biologyCell cultureGeneticsGeneS100 Proteins and AnnexinsMicroRNA in disease regulationRNA Research and Splicing