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Browsing by Author "Goswami, Chirayu P"

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    Cancer impacts microRNA expression, release and function in cardiac and skeletal muscle
    (American Association for Cancer Research, 2014-08-15) Chen, Daohong; Goswami, Chirayu P; Burnett, Riesa M; Anjanappa, Manjushree; Bhat-Nakshatri, Poornima; Muller, William; Nakshatri, Harikrishna; Department of Surgery, IU School of Medicine
    Circulating microRNAs are emerging as important biomarkers of various diseases including cancer. Intriguingly, circulating levels of several microRNAs are lower in cancer patients compared with healthy individuals. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that a circulating microRNA might serve as a surrogate of the effects of cancer on microRNA expression or release in distant organs. Here we report that circulating levels of the muscle-enriched miR-486 is lower in breast cancer patients compared with healthy individuals, and that this difference is replicated faithfully in MMTV-PyMT and MMTV-Her2 transgenic mouse models of breast cancer. In tumor-bearing mice, levels of miR-486 were relatively reduced in muscle, where there was elevated expression of the miR-486 target genes PTEN and FOXO1A and dampened signaling through the PI3K/AKT pathway. Skeletal muscle expressed lower levels of the transcription factor MyoD which controls miR-486 expression. Conditioned media (CM) obtained from MMTV-PyMT and MMTV-Her2/Neu tumor cells cultured in vitro was sufficient to elicit reduced levels of miR-486 and increased PTEN and FOXO1A expression in C2C12 murine myoblasts. Cytokine analysis implicated TNFα and four additional cytokines as mediators of miR-486 expression in CM-treated cells. Since miR-486 is a potent modulator of PI3K/AKT signaling and the muscle-enriched transcription factor network in cardiac/skeletal muscle, our findings implicated TNFα-dependent miRNA circuitry in muscle differentiation and survival pathways in cancer.
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    Persistent upregulation of U6:SNORD44 small RNA ratio in the serum of breast cancer patients
    (BMC, 2011) Appaiah, Hitesh N; Goswami, Chirayu P; Mina, Lida A; Badve, Sunil; Sledge, George W; Liu, Yunlong; Nakshatri, Harikrishna
    Introduction Serum microRNAs have the potential to be valuable biomarkers of cancer. This investigation addresses two issues that impact their utility: a) appropriate normalization controls and b) whether their altered levels persist in patients who are clinically free of the disease. Methods Sera from 40 age-matched healthy women and 39 breast cancer patients without clinical disease at the time of serum collection were analyzed for microRNAs let-7f, miR-16, miR-21 and miR-155 using quantitative real-time PCR. U6 and 5S, which are transcribed by RNA polymerase III (RNAP-III) and the small nucleolar RNU44 (SNORD44), were also analyzed for normalization. Significant results from the initial study were verified using a second set of sera from 15 healthy patients, 15 breast cancer patients without clinical disease and 15 with metastatic disease, and a third set of 12 healthy and 18 patients with metastatic disease. U6 was further verified in the extended second cohort of 75 healthy and 68 breast cancer patients without clinical disease. Results U6:SNORD44 ratio was consistently higher in breast cancer patients with or without active disease (fold change range 1.5-6.6, p value range 0.0003 to 0.05). This increase in U6:SNORD44 ratio was observed in the sera of both estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) and ER-negative breast cancer patients. MiR-16 and 5S, which are often used as normalization controls for microRNAs, showed remarkable experimental variability and thus are not ideal for normalization. Conclusions Elevated serum U6 levels in breast cancer patients irrespective of disease activity at the time of serum collection suggest a new paradigm in cancer; persistent systemic changes during cancer progression, which result in elevated activity of RNAP-III and/or the stability/release pathways of U6 in non-cancer tissues. Additionally, these results highlight the need for developing standards for normalization between samples in microRNA-related studies for healthy versus cancer and for inter-laboratory reproducibility. Our studies rule out the utility of miR-16, U6 and 5S RNAs for this purpose.
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