Published 2016
| Version v1
Publication
Blood and lung microRNAs as biomarkers of pulmonary tumorigenesis in cigarette smoke-exposed mice
Description
Cigarette smoke (CS) is known to dysregulate microRNA expression profiles in
the lungs of mice, rats, and humans, thereby modulating several pathways involved
in lung carcinogenesis and other CS-related diseases. We designed a study aimed
at evaluating (a) the expression of 1135 microRNAs in the lung of Swiss H mice
exposed to mainstream CS during the first 4 months of life and thereafter kept in
filtered air for an additional 3.5 months, (b) the relationship between lung microRNA
profiles and histopathological alterations in the lung, (c) intergender differences in
microRNA expression, and (d) the comparison with microRNA profiles in blood serum.
CS caused multiple histopathological alterations in the lung, which were almost absent
in sham-exposed mice. An extensive microRNA dysregulation was detected in the
lung of CS-exposed mice. Modulation of microRNA profiles was specifically related to
the histopathological picture, no effect being detected in lung fragments with nonneoplastic
lung diseases (emphysema or alveolar epithelial hyperplasia), whereas a
close association occurred with the presence and multiplicity of preneoplastic lesions
(microadenomas) and benign lung tumors (adenomas). Three microRNAs regulating
estrogen and HER2-dependent mechanisms were modulated in the lung of adenomabearing
female mice. Blood microRNAs were also modulated in mice affected by early
neoplastic lesions. However, there was a poor association between lung microRNAs
and circulating microRNAs, which can be ascribed to an impaired release of mature
microRNAs from the damaged lung. Studies in progress are evaluating the feasibility of
analyzing blood microRNAs as a molecular tool for lung cancer secondary prevention.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/862096
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/862096
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE