MicroRNA Biology in Cancer Development
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Oncology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2020) | Viewed by 39078
Special Issue Editors
Interests: cancer; microRNAs; immunology
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
In October 2001, two researcher groups described two "short temporal RNAs (stRNAs)" and their functions as "key regulators of development timing" in Caenorhabditis elegans. Then, in the same volume (Science, 294), another manuscript reported 15 other similar short RNAs conserved between invertebrates and vertebrates that were ultimately named microRNA. Short non-coding RNAs are strictly and temporally regulated and are able to finely adjust cellular gene expression and organism phenotypes.
Following this discovery, the major challenges in this field include determining the upstream and downstream master genes and their mechanisms of action. Study in this area is necessary to improve knowledge related to the clinical management of cancer patients.
Since cancer is the result of seemingly unjustified formation of new tissues in an organoid-like development, microRNAs could be a target for cancer treatments.
This Special Issue aims to provide a comprehensive overview of miRNA biology during neoplastic development considering all of the critical aspects of cancer: metabolism, epigenetics, drug resistance, microenvironment, tolerogenic and stemness features. We particularly encourage studies on the emergent new employment of microRNAs as (i) epigenetic regulators (nuclear activities) and (ii) the cell-to-cell communicators (eosome-mediated microRNA transfer).
Dr. Rosa Visone
Dr. Angelo Veronese
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- microRNA
- cancer
- microRNA biogenesis
- microRNA functions
- exosome
- epigenetics
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