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      Genome-wide functional screening of miR-23b as a pleiotropic modulator suppressing cancer metastasis.

      Nature Communications
      Apoptosis, genetics, physiology, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation, Colonic Neoplasms, metabolism, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Frizzled Receptors, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, HCT116 Cells, HeLa Cells, Hep G2 Cells, Humans, Immunoblotting, Immunohistochemistry, In Vitro Techniques, MAP Kinase Kinase Kinase 1, MicroRNAs, Neoplasm Invasiveness, physiopathology, Neoplasms

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          Abstract

          miRNA globally deregulates human carcinoma. A critical open question is how many miRNAs functionally participate in cancer development, particularly in metastasis. We systematically evaluate the capability of all known human miRNAs to regulate certain metastasis-relevant cell behaviours. To perform the high-throughput screen of miRNAs, which regulate cell migration, we developed a novel self-assembled cell microarray. Here we show that over 20% of miRNAs have migratory regulation activity in diverse cell types, indicating a general involvement of miRNAs in migratory regulation. MiR-23b, which is downregulated in human colon cancer samples, potently mediates the multiple steps of metastasis, including tumour growth, invasion and angiogenesis in vivo. It regulates a cohort of prometastatic targets, including FZD7 or MAP3k1. These findings provide new insight into the physiological and potential therapeutic importance of miRNAs as a new class of functional modulators.

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