香烟烟雾
小RNA
癌症研究
血管生成
医学
生物
基因
遗传学
环境卫生
作者
Asawari Korde,Anuradha Ramaswamy,Seth Anderson,Lei Jin,Jiange Zhang,Buqu Hu,Walter V. Velasco,Lixia Diao,Jing Wang,Margaret A. Pisani,Maor Sauler,Daniel J. Boffa,Jonathan Puchalski,Xiting Yan,Seyed Javad Moghaddam,S. Takyar
标识
DOI:10.1038/s42003-025-07710-y
摘要
Cigarette smoke (CS) creates a "cancer field" in the lung that promotes malignant transformation. The molecular changes within this field are not fully characterized. We examined the significance of microRNA-1 (miR-1) downregulation as one of these changes. We found that tumor miR-1 levels in three non-small cell lung cancer cohorts show inverse correlations with the smoking burden. Lung MiR-1 levels follow a spatial gradient, have prognostic significance, and correlate inversely with the molecular markers of injury. In CS-exposed lungs, miR-1 is specifically downregulated in the endothelium. Exposure to CS induces angiogenesis by selectively degrading mature miR-1 via a vascular endothelial growth factor-driven pathway. Applying a multi-step molecular screen, we identified angiogenic genes regulated by miR-1 in the lungs of smokers. Knockdown of one of these genes, Notch homolog protein 3, simulates the anti-angiogenic effects of miR-1. These findings suggest that miR-1 can be used as an indicator of malignant transformation.
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