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QuickTime™ and a Sorenson Video 3 decompressor are needed to see this picture. Günther Weber Small RNAs and their significance in Cancer Small RNA is much more than RNAi Small RNAs do more than degrading one target mRNA Small RNA is used in general for gene regulation. The molecules are similar with siRNA but may have a different regulatory effect Topics What are small RNAs? Where do they come from? What do they do/why do they exist? What is their importance in cancer? and about RNAi: Can we use them against cancer? small RNA, summary: natural production as hairpin RNA processing with Dicer complex to siRNA or miRNA use either in RNA interference or for transcriptional/translational control Part 1 What is a miRNA? • Small single stranded RNAs (21-25 nucleotides) but derived from larger precursors (double stranded RNAs) • Non-coding sequences • Form imperfect stem-loop structures (hairpin) • Hybridize by incomplete base-pairing to several sites in the 3’-untranslated regions of target mRNAs • Negative regulators of gene expression (Postranscriptional and Translational regulation ) • Role in disease still in research ( cancer) The first described miRNA (2000) Lin(abnormal cell LINeage)-4 L1 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. L2 L3 L4 The first described miRNA (2000) lin-4 =Evolutionarily conserved QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. The first described miRNA (2000) lin-4= 22 nucleotides miRNA QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. represses accumulation of LIN-14 protein Alex Eccleston Biogenesis • RNAse III enzymes - Drosha (nucleus) - Dicer (cytoplasm) • Both enzymes involved in the generation of siRNA RISC = RNA-induced silencing complex (contains miRNPs and Argonaute family proteins) RISC = Degradation/Silencing? • • Molecular Hallmarks ~ 70 nucleotides ~ 22 nucleotides A principle of miRNA: Only part of miRNA is complementary to its target, thus its specificity is more limited. Therefore one miRNA can have different targets • Match with target (degree of complementarity) = Prob. of degradation • Possibly each miRNA may target multiple genes • miRNA = or siRNA ? – Biochemically indistinguishable – Single vs double-stranded – Repression vs degradation? • Post-Transcriptional Gene Silencing (PTGS) versus TransIational Inhibition Function in Translation mRNA-specific Regulation of Translation Control by Micro RNAs The “head” is regulated by the “tail” miRNA interferes in this regulation Contrary to RNAi, the mRNA is not degraded Practical distinction PTGS vs translational repression: PTGS: mRNA AND protein levels reduced/disappeared Transl. repression: Protein reduced, mRNA maintained Useful methods: ELISA/Western blot analysis plus qPCR/Northern blot miRNA registry Oct 2008: 770 miRNA H sapiens, + mouse, rat Expression Patterns Identification Methods • Microarray – tissue variability • Northern blot, RT-PCR, others • Bioinformatic predictions miRNA microarray design • selection of miRNAs • 161 human • 84 mouse • 3 arabidopsis • 40-mer oligos spotted on array Experimental procedures • 2.5 µg total RNA • Incubated with a 3'-(N)8-(A)12-biotin-(A)12-biotin-5‘ oligonucleotide primer • 1st strand synthesis • Hybridisation at 25°C o.n. • Detection using a streptavidin-Alexa647 conjugate miRNA expression in normal human tissues Bead-based detection • purification of miRNA on PAGE • adaptor ligation • reverse transcription and amplification with PCR • denaturation • hybridisation to beads Correlation between bead data and Nothern Blot data Hierarchial clustering of miRNA expression Conclusions • Different tissues have distinctive patterns of miRNome expression (defined as the full set of miRNA in a cell) with each tissue presenting a specific signature. • Some miRNAs are highly expressed in only one or a few tissues. mRNA targets of miRNAs Methodology • To investigate the influence of miRNAs on transcript levels • miRNA transfection into human cells microarray Transfection with miR-124 Transfection with miR-1 Conclusions • • • • miR-124 shifts towards brain expression profile miR-1 shifts towards muscle expression profile ~100 messages were downregulated after 12 hs miRNAs can also reduce transcripts levels (not only proteins) • Help to define tissue-specific gene expression in humans Can the expression of miRNAs be used to characterize human cancer? Most miRNAs have a lower expression level in tumours compared with normal tissue… …and even lower expression levels in poorly differentiated tumours Classification of tumours of unknown origin • 2-4 % of all cancer diagnoses represent cancers of unknown origin or diagnostic uncertainty • 17 poorly differentiated tumours where the histological appearance was non-diagnostic (but for which diagnosis was established by anatomical context) were used (5 breast, 1 colon, 8 lung, 3 ovary). • Training set based on 68 samples from 11 tissue types. Classification of tumours of unknown origin • Prediction of tissue origin using a probabilistic neural network (PNN) method: – 11 out of 17 samples correctly predicted (2 breast cancer samples and 4 lung cancer samples erroneously predicted). – 1 out of 17 samples correctly predicted using mRNA based classification. Observation both on healthy tissue and cancer: The pattern of expression of miRNA is more characteristic for a tissue and its development than the expression of mRNA. 1 miRNA can control 100 mRNA To be examined: how important is miRNA expression to differentiation and tissue development? for cancer: how much can a miRNA contribute to cancer development and progression? Are miR rarely or often affected in cancer development? Correlation between Fragile chromosome sites and location of miRNA genes Calin G. A. et.al. PNAS 2004;101:2999-3004 Copyright © 2004, The National Academy of Sciences Can miRNA work like an oncogene? Can miRNA be tumor suppressors? first circumstancial evidence The majority of CLL samples express lower levels of miR16 and miR15 as normal CD5+ cells. The LOH status for the presented samples is shown as: +/+, heterozygosity; +/−, LOH; −/−, homozygous deletion; NI, not informative; ND, not done. As normalization controls, we used staining with ethidium bromide of Northern gels. Bcl2 protein expression is inversely correlated with miR-15a and miR-16-1 miRNAs expression in CLL patients Cimmino A. et.al. PNAS 2005;102:13944-13949 Copyright © 2005, The National Academy of Sciences BCL2 is a target of miR-15 and miR-16.(A) Transfection of miR-15a/miR-16-1 cluster in MEG01 BCL2+ leukemia cells is followed by a significant reduction in protein levels Cimmino A. et.al. PNAS 2005;102:13944-13949 Copyright © 2005, The National Academy of Sciences Apoptotic evaluation determined through comparison of TUNEL-positive apoptotic nuclei and total number of cells Cimmino A. et.al. PNAS 2005;102:13944-13949 Copyright © 2005, The National Academy of Sciences Is the expression of certain miRNA characteristic for cancer? Examples: miRNA influencing known cancer-related genes MiRs as cancer players Calin G. A. et.al. PNAS 2004;101:2999-3004 Copyright © 2004, The National Academy of Sciences Summary: miRNA are regulating elements for gene expression, both on the levels of transcription and translation. miRNA expression can be altered in cancer, which can affect the expression of multiple other genes. The expression is characteristic for specific tissues and cancer forms. Some miRNAs are located at fragile chromosome sites - chromosome breakages can thus easily alter their expression levels. Part 2 Can we use small RNAs against cancer? What is the potential for RNAi in cancer therapy? Summary of the RNAi mechanism Proof of concept: Injection of 50µg siRNA into tailvein of EGFP-transgenic mice downregulates luciferase in various organs, however not in all cells in the organ RNAi can be used to suppress unwanted alternatively spliced transcripts RNAi can be used to suppress exon skipping RNAi can be used to suppress transcripts with point mutations Problems for RNAi 1. specificity sometimes “hyped”: side effects as micro RNA quite possible “The almost ideal specificity of RNAi has shown not to hold entirely true in reality” 2. efficiency of delivery system you can’t inject enough siRNA for treatment 3. specificity for target cell to be questioned you don’t want to shut off a vital gene in a healthy cell. Fig. 2. The left hand side shows various non-targeted or targeted in vivo delivery strategies for RNA-based siRNA drugs. The right hand side shows a schematic diagram of either a DNA-based pol-III or pol-II promoted shRNA expression cassettes. These shRNA expression units can by delivered by viral or non-viral methods to the target tissue, as illustrated by gene transfer using lentiviral vector technology. Figure 2. Growth of xenograft tumors. Each point represents the mean volume ± standard deviation on the X-axis. Point 1 represents the day of DNA injection; point 4 was the time when the mice were sacrificed. *P<0.001, VEGF-C-siRNA group vs control group. alternative delivery: packaging in particles. Coating possible to targeting the particles to cancer cells Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the delivery system. A, components of the delivery system. The CDP condenses siRNA and protects it from nuclease degradation. The AD-PEG conjugate stabilizes the particles in physiologic fluids via inclusion compound formation. The AD-PEG-transferrin (Tf-PED-AD) conjugate confers a targeting ligand to particles, promoting their uptake by cells overexpressing the cell-surface transferrin receptor. B, assembly of the nontargeted and targeted particles. For nontargeted particles, CDP and AD-PEG are combined and added to siRNA to generate stable but nontargeted polyplexes. For targeted particles, CDP, AD-PEG, and AD-PEG-transferrin are combined and added to siRNA to generate stable, targeted particles Figure 5. Effect of long-term delivery of siRNA formulations on growth of metastasized EFT in mice Hu-Lieskovan, S. et al. Cancer Res 2005;65:8984-8992 Copyright ©2005 American Association for Cancer Research Premature summary: Gene therapy in general has not too much advanced in the past years. There are successful, but few means how to treat cancer by gene therapy. RNAi does not belong to them. We are still in the experimental phase using RNAi. The problems for gene therapy in general and RNAi in gene therapy in particular should not be underestimated. Reviews for those who liked the story: Barthel DP: MicroRNAs: Genomics, Biogenesis, Mechanism, and Function. Cell, 116, 281-297 (2004) (Review) Zhang B, Pan X, Cobb GP, Anderson TA: microRNAs as oncogenes and tumor suppressors Developmental Biology, 302, 1-12 (2007) (Review) Lee R, Feinbaum R, Ambros V.: A short history of a Short RNA. Cell, S116, S89-S92 (2004) (highly recommended to learn how to do real Science!) databases: http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk/sequences/index.shtml http://www.ma.uni-heidelberg.de/apps/zmf/argonaute/