Open Access
Promotion of Cervical Cancer Cell Proliferation by miR-130b Expression Level Changes and Inhibition of its Apoptosis by Targeting CDKN1A Gene
Author(s) -
Yanli Wang,
Lei Yang,
Caihong Fan,
Ming Hong,
Munan Han,
Tao Liu,
Lili Xie,
Qiang Gao
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
current cancer drug targets
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.972
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1873-5576
pISSN - 1568-0096
DOI - 10.2174/1568009622666220111090715
Subject(s) - apoptosis , promotion (chess) , cancer research , cervical cancer , cell growth , gene expression , gene , cancer , medicine , biology , genetics , political science , politics , law
Background: Dysregulation of miR-130b expression is associated with development of different cancers However, the description of the biological roles of miR-130b in the growth and survival of cervical cancer cells is limited. Method: The miR-130b levels in cervical cancer cells during different stage of growth were determined using Reverse transcription-quantitative PCR. Methylation level of DNA sequences upstream of the miR-130b gene were measured using a SYBR Green-based quantitative methylation-specific PCR. Reverse transcription-quantitative PCR, Western blotting and fluorescence report assays were used to identify the miR-130b-targeted gene. Cell counting kit-8 and comet assays were used to determine cell viability and DNA damage levels in cells, respectively. EdU Apopllo488 In Vitro Flow Cytometry kit, propidium iodide staining, anti-γ-H2AX antibody staining and Annexin-V apoptosis kit were subsequently used to determine DNA synthesis rates, cell cycle distribution, count of DNA double strand breaks and levels of apoptotic cells Result: MiR-130b levels increased at exponential phases of the growth of cervical cancer cells, but reduced at stationary phases. The methylation of a prominent CpG island near the transcript start site suppressed the miR-130b gene expression. MiR-130b increased cell viability, promoted both DNA synthesis and G1 to S phase transition of the cells at exponential phases, but reduced cell viability accompanied by accumulations of DNA breaks and augmentations in apoptosis rates of the cells in stationary phases by targeting cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A mRNA Conclusion: A miR-130b promoted the growth of cervical cancer cells during exponential phase, whereas impaired the survival of cells during stationary phases.