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Melanoma
6 Results
- Original Article Keratinocytes/EpidermisOpen Archive
miR-146b Probably Assists miRNA-146a in the Suppression of Keratinocyte Proliferation and Inflammatory Responses in Psoriasis
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 137Issue 9p1945–1954Published online: June 5, 2017- Helen Hermann
- Toomas Runnel
- Alar Aab
- Hansjörg Baurecht
- Elke Rodriguez
- Nathaniel Magilnick
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 59miR-146a inhibits inflammatory responses in human keratinocytes and in different mouse models of skin inflammation. Little is known about the role of miR-146b in the skin. In this study, we confirmed the increased expression of miR-146a and miR-146b (miR-146a/b) in the lesional skin of patients with psoriasis. The expression of miR-146a was approximately twofold higher than that of miR-146b in healthy human skin, and it was more strongly induced by stimulation of proinflammatory cytokines in keratinocytes and fibroblasts. - Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Archive
MicroRNA-211 Regulates Oxidative Phosphorylation and Energy Metabolism in Human Vitiligo
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 137Issue 9p1965–1974Published online: May 11, 2017- Anupama Sahoo
- Bongyong Lee
- Katia Boniface
- Julien Seneschal
- Sanjaya K. Sahoo
- Tatsuya Seki
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 50Vitiligo is a common chronic skin disorder characterized by loss of epidermal melanocytes and progressive depigmentation. Vitiligo has complex immune, genetic, environmental, and biochemical causes, but the exact molecular mechanisms of vitiligo development and progression, particularly those related to metabolic control, are poorly understood. In this study we characterized the human vitiligo cell line PIG3V and the normal human melanocyte line HEM-l by RNA sequencing, targeted metabolomics, and shotgun lipidomics. - Original Article Tumor BiologyOpen Archive
MicroRNA-203 Inversely Correlates with Differentiation Grade, Targets c-MYC, and Functions as a Tumor Suppressor in cSCC
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 136Issue 12p2485–2494Published online: July 21, 2016- Warangkana Lohcharoenkal
- Masako Harada
- Jakob Lovén
- Florian Meisgen
- Ning Xu Landén
- Lingyun Zhang
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 32Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) is the second most common cancer and a leading cause of cancer mortality among solid organ transplant recipients. MicroRNAs (miR) are short RNAs that regulate gene expression and cellular functions. Here, we show a negative correlation between miR-203 expression and the differentiation grade of cSCC. Functionally, miR-203 suppressed cell proliferation, cell motility, and the angiogenesis-inducing capacity of cSCC cells in vitro and reduced xenograft tumor volume and angiogenesis in vivo. - Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Archive
Regulation of Melanoma Progression through the TCF4/miR-125b/NEDD9 Cascade
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 136Issue 6p1229–1237Published online: March 8, 2016- Florian Rambow
- Audrey Bechadergue
- Flavie Luciani
- Gwendoline Gros
- Melanie Domingues
- Jacky Bonaventure
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 21Melanoma progression from a primary lesion to a distant metastasis is a complex process associated with genetic alterations, epigenetic modifications, and phenotypic switches. Elucidation of these phenomena may indicate how to interfere with this fatal disease. The role of microRNAs as key negative regulators of gene expression, controlling all cellular processes including cell migration and invasion, is now being recognized. Here, we used in silico analysis of microRNA expression profiles of primary and metastatic melanomas and functional experiments to show that microRNA-125b (miR-125b) is a determinant candidate of melanoma progression: (i) miR-125b is more strongly expressed in aggressive metastatic than primary melanomas, (ii) there is an inverse correlation between the amount of miR-125b and overall patient survival, (iii) invasion/migration potentials in vitro are inversely correlated with the amount of miR-125b in a series of human melanoma cell lines, and (iv) inhibition of miR-125b reduces migratory and invasive potentials without affecting cell proliferation in vitro. - Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Archive
Serum miR-16: A Potential Biomarker for Predicting Melanoma Prognosis
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 136Issue 5p985–993Published online: January 29, 2016- Sen Guo
- Weinan Guo
- Shuli Li
- Wei Dai
- Nan Zhang
- Tao Zhao
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 40Melanoma is among the most malignant cancers with notorious aggressiveness, and its prognosis is greatly influenced by progression status. Serum microRNAs are small noncoding RNAs with high stability and easy accessibility in human blood. Their expression profiles are frequently dysregulated in cancers; hence, levels of serum microRNAs may reflect progression status and thus predict melanoma prognosis. In a hospital based case-control study, we found a significant reduction of serum miR-16 level in melanoma patients compared with cancer-free controls (P < 0.001). - Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Archive
Identification, Review, and Systematic Cross-Validation of microRNA Prognostic Signatures in Metastatic Melanoma
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 136Issue 1p245–254Published in issue: January, 2016- Kaushala Jayawardana
- Sarah-Jane Schramm
- Varsha Tembe
- Samuel Mueller
- John F. Thompson
- Richard A. Scolyer
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 59In metastatic melanoma, it is vital to identify and validate biomarkers of prognosis. Previous studies have systematically evaluated protein biomarkers or mRNA-based expression signatures. No such analyses have been applied to microRNA (miRNA)-based prognostic signatures. As a first step, we identified two prognostic miRNA signatures from publicly available data sets (Gene Expression Omnibus/The Cancer Genome Atlas) of global miRNA expression profiling information. A 12-miRNA signature predicted longer survival after surgery for resection of American Joint Committee on Cancer stage III disease (>4 years, no sign of relapse) and outperformed American Joint Committee on Cancer standard-of-care prognostic markers in leave-one-out cross-validation analysis (error rates 34% and 38%, respectively).