These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Exosomal transfer of miR-501 confers doxorubicin resistance and tumorigenesis via targeting of BLID in gastric cancer. Author: Liu X, Lu Y, Xu Y, Hou S, Huang J, Wang B, Zhao J, Xia S, Fan S, Yu X, Du Y, Hou L, Li Z, Ding Z, An S, Huang B, Li L, Tang J, Ju J, Guan H, Song B. Journal: Cancer Lett; 2019 Sep 10; 459():122-134. PubMed ID: 31173853. Abstract: Exosomal transfer of oncogenic miRNAs can enhance recipient cell growth, metastasis and chemoresistance. Currently we found that microRNA-501-5p (miR-501) was overexpressed in doxorubicin-resistant gastric cancer (GC) SGC7901/ADR cell-secreted exosomes (ADR Exo) than that in SGC7901 cell-secreted exosomes (7901 Exo). ADR Exo was internalized by SGC7901, and a Cy3-miR-501 mimic was transferred from SGC7901/ADR to SGC7901 via exosomes. ADR Exo conferred doxorubicin resistance, proliferation, migration and invasion abilities to negative control miRNA inhibitor-expressing GC cells, whereas it inhibited apoptosis. MiR-501 knockdown or BH3-like motif-containing protein, cell death inducer (BLID) overexpression could reverse the effects of ADR Exo on recipient cells. SGC7901 cells cocultured with SGC7901/ADR prior to treatment with GW4869 or transfection of a miR-501 inhibitor were sensitive to doxorubicin and exhibited attenuated proliferation, migration and invasion and increased apoptosis. The intratumoral injection of ADR Exo into negative control miRNA inhibitor-expressing SGC7901 cells induced rapid subcutaneous tumor growth and resistance to doxorubicin compared to that of miR-501 knockdown or BLID-overexpressing cells. This effect is possibly achieved by exosomal miR-501-induced downregulation of BLID, subsequent inactivation of caspase-9/-3 and phosphorylation of Akt. Exosomal miR-501 might be a therapeutic target for GC.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]