Comprehensive investigation of aberrant microRNA profiling in bladder cancer tissues.
Yanping WeiRongquan HeYuzhuang WuBinliang GanPeirong WuXiaohui QiuAihua LanGang ChenQiuyan WangXinggu LinYingchun ChenZengnan MoPublished in: Tumour biology : the journal of the International Society for Oncodevelopmental Biology and Medicine (2016)
There has been accumulative evidence that microRNAs (miRNAs) play essential roles in the tumorigenesis and progression of bladder cancer. However, individual studies and small sample size caused discrepant outcomes. Thus, the current study focused on a comprehensive profiling of all differentially expressed miRNAs in a total of 519 bladder cancer tissue samples, based on miRNA microarray data. Altogether, 11 prioritized miRNAs stated by 21 published microarray datasets, including five down-regulated (miR-133a-3p, miR-1-3p, miR-99a-5p, miR-490-5p, and miR-133b) and six up-regulated candidate miRNAs (miR-182-5p, miR-935, miR-518e-3p, miR-573, miR-100-3p, and miR-3171) were analyzed with vote-counting strategy and a Robust Rank Aggregation method. Subsequently, miRNA in silico target prediction and potential pathway enrichment analysis were performed to investigate the prospective molecular mechanism of miRNAs in the tumorigenesis of bladder cancer. We found that most of the relative pathways of the aberrantly expressed miRNAs found in the current study were closely correlated with different biological processes, cellular components, molecular functions, cancer pathogeneses, and some cell signalings, such as Wnt signaling, insulin/IGF, PI3 kinase, and FGF signaling pathways. Hence, a comprehensive overview on the miRNA expression pattern in bladder cancer tissues was gained by the current study. These miRNAs might be involved in the tumorigenesis and deterioration of bladder cancer.
Keyphrases
- cell proliferation
- long non coding rna
- long noncoding rna
- gene expression
- single cell
- type diabetes
- signaling pathway
- poor prognosis
- stem cells
- systematic review
- randomized controlled trial
- machine learning
- binding protein
- young adults
- muscle invasive bladder cancer
- deep learning
- data analysis
- single molecule
- glycemic control
- weight loss
- endoplasmic reticulum stress