Frontiers in Oncology (Apr 2022)

In Vivo miRNA Decoy Screen Reveals miR-124a as a Suppressor of Melanoma Metastasis

  • Rana S. Moubarak,
  • Rana S. Moubarak,
  • Rana S. Moubarak,
  • Lisa Koetz-Ploch,
  • Lisa Koetz-Ploch,
  • Gavriel Mullokandov,
  • Avital Gaziel,
  • Avital Gaziel,
  • Ana de Pablos-Aragoneses,
  • Ana de Pablos-Aragoneses,
  • Diana Argibay,
  • Diana Argibay,
  • Kevin Kleffman,
  • Kevin Kleffman,
  • Elena Sokolova,
  • Elena Sokolova,
  • Marianne Berwick,
  • Nancy E. Thomas,
  • Iman Osman,
  • Iman Osman,
  • Iman Osman,
  • Brian D. Brown,
  • Eva Hernando,
  • Eva Hernando,
  • Eva Hernando

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.852952
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Melanoma is a highly prevalent cancer with an increasing incidence worldwide and high metastatic potential. Brain metastasis is a major complication of the disease, as more than 50% of metastatic melanoma patients eventually develop intracranial disease. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been found to play an important role in the tumorigenicity of different cancers and have potential as markers of disease outcome. Identification of relevant miRNAs has generally stemmed from miRNA profiling studies of cells or tissues, but these approaches may have missed miRNAs with relevant functions that are expressed in subfractions of cancer cells. We performed an unbiased in vivo screen to identify miRNAs with potential functions as metastasis suppressors using a lentiviral library of miRNA decoys. Notably, we found that a significant fraction of melanomas that metastasized to the brain carried a decoy for miR-124a, a miRNA that is highly expressed in the brain/neurons. Additional loss- and gain-of-function in vivo validation studies confirmed miR-124a as a suppressor of melanoma metastasis and particularly of brain metastasis. miR-124a overexpression did not inhibit tumor growth in vivo, underscoring that miR-124a specifically controls processes required for melanoma metastatic growth, such as seeding and growth post-extravasation. Finally, we provide proof of principle of this miRNA as a promising therapeutic agent by showing its ability to impair metastatic growth of melanoma cells seeded in distal organs. Our efforts shed light on miR-124a as an antimetastatic agent, which could be leveraged therapeutically to impair metastatic growth and improve patient survival.

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