MiR-27b-3p exerts tumor suppressor effects in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma by targeting Nrf2

In this study, the expression levels of miR-27b-3p were significantly reduced in ESCC clinical tissues and ESCC cell lines (EC97069 and TE-1). Moreover, down-regulated expression of miR-27b-3p was associated with poor cell differentiation, TNM stage and lymph node metastasis. Specially, overexpression of miR-27b-3p significantly suppressed cell proliferation, migration and invasion in vitro using CCK-8 and transwell assays. Targetscan bioinformatics predictions and luciferase reporter assay confirmed that nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NFE2L2, Nrf2) was a direct target gene of miR-27b-3p. Nrf2 expression was significantly increased in ESCC tissues compared with adjacent tissues. Up-regulated expression of Nrf2 was correlated with TNM stage and lymph node metastasis. Functionally, knockdown of Nrf2 exhibited similar effects to overexpression of miR-27b-3p. Higher expression of ZO-1, E-cadherin and lower expression of N-cadherin, Vimentin and Claudin-1 were observed after miR-27b-3p overexpression of Nrf2 knockdown. Rescue experiments proved that miR-27b-3p suppressed cell proliferation, migration, invasion and epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) via suppression of Nrf2. Taken together, the newly identified miR-27b-3p/Nrf2 axis might represent a new candidate therapeutic target for ESCC treatment.
Source: Human Cell - Category: Cytology Source Type: research