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The Roles of ceRNAs-Mediated Autophagy in Cancer Chemoresistance and Metastasis

Huilin Zhang, Bingjian Lü

2020Cancers39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chemoresistance and metastasis are the main causes of treatment failure and unfavorable outcome in cancers. There is a pressing need to reveal their mechanisms and to discover novel therapy targets. Autophagy is composed of a cascade of steps controlled by different autophagy-related genes (ATGs). Accumulating evidence suggests that dysregulated autophagy contributes to chemoresistance and metastasis via competing endogenous RNA (ceRNA) networks including lncRNAs and circRNAs. ceRNAs sequester the targeted miRNA expression to indirectly upregulate ATGs expression, and thereof participate in autophagy-mediated chemoresistance and metastasis. Here, we attempt to summarize the roles of ceRNAs in cancer chemoresistance and metastasis through autophagy regulation.

Topics & Concepts

Competing endogenous RNAAutophagyMetastasismicroRNADownregulation and upregulationCancer researchBiologyCancerGeneBioinformaticsComputational biologyLong non-coding RNAGeneticsApoptosisCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchAutophagy in Disease and TherapyCircular RNAs in diseases
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