AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how miRNAs affect the development of intestinal metaplasia and SPEM, which are precursors to gastric cancer, by analyzing gene expression changes.
  • Researchers used quantitative reverse transcription-PCR and integrated miRNA and mRNA profiles from human samples to identify regulatory circuits and observed how different miRNAs impact metaplasia markers.
  • Key findings suggest that miR-30 and miR-194 regulate important transcription factors HNF4γ and NR2F2, influencing the expression of intestinal markers during metaplasia progression.

Article Abstract

Objective: Intestinal metaplasia and spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia (SPEM) are considered neoplastic precursors of gastric adenocarcinoma and are both marked by gene expression alterations in comparison to normal stomach. Since miRNAs are important regulators of gene expression, we sought to investigate the role of miRNAs on the development of stomach metaplasias.

Design: We performed miRNA profiling using a quantitative reverse transcription-PCR approach on laser capture microdissected human intestinal metaplasia and SPEM. Data integration of the miRNA profile with a previous mRNA profile from the same samples was performed to detect potential miRNA-mRNA regulatory circuits. Transfection of gastric cancer cell lines with selected miRNA mimics and inhibitors was used to evaluate their effects on the expression of putative targets and additional metaplasia markers.

Results: We identified several genes as potential targets of miRNAs altered during metaplasia progression. We showed evidence that HNF4γ (upregulated in intestinal metaplasia) is targeted by miR-30 and that miR-194 targets a known co-regulator of HNF4 activity, NR2F2 (downregulated in intestinal metaplasia). Intestinal metaplasia markers such as VIL1, TFF2 and TFF3 were downregulated after overexpression of miR-30a in a HNF4γ-dependent manner. In addition, overexpression of HNF4γ was sufficient to induce the expression of VIL1 and this effect was potentiated by downregulation of NR2F2.

Conclusions: The interplay of the two transcription factors HNF4γ and NR2F2 and their coordinate regulation by miR-30 and miR-194, respectively, represent a miRNA to transcription factor network responsible for the expression of intestinal transcripts in stomach cell lineages during the development of intestinal metaplasia.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4922252PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2014-308759DOI Listing

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