Characterization of Functionally Associated MiRNAs in Glioblastoma and Their Engineering into Artificial Clusters for Gene Therapy
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The biological relevance of microRNAs (miRNAs) in health and disease significantly relies on specific combinations of many simultaneously deregulated miRNAs rather than the action of a single miRNA. The characterization of these specific miRNAs modules is a fundamental step in maximizing their use in therapy. This is extremely relevant because their combinatorial attributes can be practically exploited. Described here is a method to define a specific miRNA signature relevant to the control of oncogenic chromatin repressors in glioblastoma. The approach first defines a general group of miRNAs that are deregulated in tumors in comparison to normal tissue. The analysis is further refined by differential culture conditions, underscoring a subgroup of miRNAs that are co-expressed simultaneously during specific cellular states. Finally, the miRNAs that satisfy these filters are combined into an artificial polycistronic transgenes, which is based on a scaffold of naturally existing miRNA clusters genes, then used for overexpression of these miRNA modules into receiving cells.
Liu B, Yao S, Zhou J Biosci Rep. 2020; 40(12).
PMID: 33078195 PMC: 7736625. DOI: 10.1042/BSR20201529.