Radiotherapy Metastatic Prostate Cancer Cell Lines Treated with Gold Nanorods Modulate miRNA Signatures.

Journal: International journal of molecular sciences

Volume: 25

Issue: 5

Year of Publication: 2024

Affiliated Institutions:  (iS), Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde, - Porto, Portugal. Radiotherapy Service, São João Hospital Center, - Porto, Portugal. FP-IID, Instituto de Investigação, Inovação e Desenvolvimento, FP-BHS, Biomedical and Health Sciences, Universidade Fernando Pessoa (UFP), - Porto, Portugal. CEB, Centre of Biological Engineering, Minho University, - Braga, Portugal. CINBIO, University of Vigo, Vigo, Spain.

Abstract summary 

MicroRNA (miRNA) modulation has been identified as a promising strategy for improving the response of human prostate cancer (PCa) to radiotherapy (RT). Studies have shown that mimics or inhibitors of miRNAs could modulate the sensitivity of PCa cells to RT. In addition, pegylated gold nanoparticles have been studied as a therapeutic approach to treat PCa cells and/or vehicles for carrying miRNAs to the inside of cells. Therefore, we evaluated the capacity of hypofractionated RT and pegylated gold nanorods (AuNPr-PEG) to modulate the miRNA signature on PCa cells. Thus, RT-qPCR was used to analyze miRNA-95, miRNA-106-5p, miRNA-145-5p, and miRNA-541-3p on three human metastatic prostate cell lines (PC3, DU145, and LNCaP) and one human prostate epithelial cell line (HprEpiC, a non-tumor cell line) with and without treatment. Our results showed that miRNA expression levels depend on cell type and the treatment combination applied using RT and AuNPr-PEG. In addition, cells pre-treated with AuNPr-PEG and submitted to 2.5 Gy per day for 3 days decreased the expression levels of miRNA-95, miRNA-106, miRNA-145, and miRNA-541-3p. In conclusion, PCa patients submitted to hypofractionated RT could receive personalized treatment based on their metastatic cellular miRNA signature, and AuNPr-PEG could be used to increase metastatic cell radiosensitivity.

Authors & Co-authors:  Soares Aires Monteiro Pinto Faria Sales Correa-Duarte Guerreiro Fernandes

Study Outcome 

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Citations :  Peng Y., Croce C.M. The role of micrornas in human cancer. Signal Transduct. Target. Ther. 2016;1:15004. doi: 10.1038/sigtrans.2015.4.
Authors :  9
Identifiers
Doi : 2754
SSN : 1422-0067
Study Population
Male
Mesh Terms
Male
Other Terms
gold nanorods;microRNAs;prostate cancer cell lines;radiotherapy
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
Switzerland