Published 2023
| Version v1
Publication
Gender Differences and miRNAs Expression in Cancer: Implications on Prognosis and Susceptibility
Contributors
Description
MicroRNAs are small, noncoding molecules of about twenty-two nucleotides with crucial
roles in both healthy and pathological cells. Their expression depends not only on genetic factors, but
also on epigenetic mechanisms like genomic imprinting and inactivation of X chromosome in females
that influence in a sex-dependent manner onset, progression, and response to therapy of different
diseases like cancer. There is evidence of a correlation between miRNAs, sex, and cancer both in
solid tumors and in hematological malignancies; as an example, in lymphomas, with a prevalence
rate higher in men than women, miR-142 is "silenced" because of its hypermethylation by DNA
methyltransferase-1 and it is blocked in its normal activity of regulating the migration of the cell.
This condition corresponds in clinical practice with a more aggressive tumor. In addition, cancer
treatment can have advantages from the evaluation of miRNAs expression; in fact, therapy with
estrogens in hepatocellular carcinoma determines an upregulation of the oncosuppressors miR-26a,
miR-92, and miR-122 and, consequently, apoptosis. The aim of this review is to present an exhaustive
collection of scientific data about the possible role of sex differences on the expression of miRNAs
and the mechanisms through which miRNAs influence cancerogenesis, autophagy, and apoptosis of
cells from diverse types of tumors.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1150675
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1150675
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE