MYCN/c-MYC-induced microRNAs repress coding gene networks associated with poor outcome in MYCN/c-MYC-activated tumors

P Mestdagh, E Fredlund, F Pattyn, JH Schulte, D Muth… - Oncogene, 2010 - nature.com
P Mestdagh, E Fredlund, F Pattyn, JH Schulte, D Muth, J Vermeulen, C Kumps, S Schlierf…
Oncogene, 2010nature.com
Increased activity of MYC protein-family members is a common feature in many cancers.
Using neuroblastoma as a tumor model, we established a microRNA (miRNA) signature for
activated MYCN/c-MYC signaling in two independent primary neuroblastoma tumor cohorts
and provide evidence that c-MYC and MYCN have overlapping functions. On the basis of an
integrated approach including miRNA and messenger RNA (mRNA) gene expression data
we show that miRNA activation contributes to widespread mRNA repression, both in c-MYC …
Abstract
Increased activity of MYC protein-family members is a common feature in many cancers. Using neuroblastoma as a tumor model, we established a microRNA (miRNA) signature for activated MYCN/c-MYC signaling in two independent primary neuroblastoma tumor cohorts and provide evidence that c-MYC and MYCN have overlapping functions. On the basis of an integrated approach including miRNA and messenger RNA (mRNA) gene expression data we show that miRNA activation contributes to widespread mRNA repression, both in c-MYC-and MYCN-activated tumors. c-MYC/MYCN-induced miRNA activation was shown to be dependent on c-MYC/MYCN promoter binding as evidenced by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Finally, we show that pathways, repressed through c-MYC/MYCN miRNA activation, are highly correlated to tumor aggressiveness and are conserved across different tumor entities suggesting that c-MYC/MYCN activate a core set of miRNAs for cooperative repression of common transcriptional programs related to disease aggressiveness. Our results uncover a widespread correlation between miRNA activation and c-MYC/MYCN-mediated coding gene expression modulation and further substantiate the overlapping functions of c-MYC and MYCN in the process of tumorigenesis.
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