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Merck
CN
  • Systematic characterization of A-to-I RNA editing hotspots in microRNAs across human cancers.

Systematic characterization of A-to-I RNA editing hotspots in microRNAs across human cancers.

Genome research (2017-04-16)
Yumeng Wang, Xiaoyan Xu, Shuangxing Yu, Kang Jin Jeong, Zhicheng Zhou, Leng Han, Yiu Huen Tsang, Jun Li, Hu Chen, Lingegowda S Mangala, Yuan Yuan, A Karina Eterovic, Yiling Lu, Anil K Sood, Kenneth L Scott, Gordon B Mills, Han Liang
摘要

RNA editing, a widespread post-transcriptional mechanism, has emerged as a new player in cancer biology. Recent studies have reported key roles for individual miRNA editing events, but a comprehensive picture of miRNA editing in human cancers remains largely unexplored. Here, we systematically characterized the miRNA editing profiles of 8595 samples across 20 cancer types from miRNA sequencing data of The Cancer Genome Atlas and identified 19 adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing hotspots. We independently validated 15 of them by perturbation experiments in several cancer cell lines. These miRNA editing events show extensive correlations with key clinical variables (e.g., tumor subtype, disease stage, and patient survival time) and other molecular drivers. Focusing on the RNA editing hotspot in miR-200b, a key tumor metastasis suppressor, we found that the miR-200b editing level correlates with patient prognosis opposite to the pattern observed for the wild-type miR-200b expression. We further experimentally showed that, in contrast to wild-type miRNA, the edited miR-200b can promote cell invasion and migration through its impaired ability to inhibit