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Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles
Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles
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Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles
Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles

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Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles
Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles
Journal Article

Predicting the presence of breast cancer using circulating small RNAs, including those in the extracellular vesicles

2020
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Overview
Emerging evidence indicates that small RNAs, including microRNAs (miRNAs) and their isoforms (isomiRs), and transfer RNA fragments (tRFs), are differently expressed in breast cancer (BC) and can be detected in blood circulation. Circulating small RNAs and small RNAs in extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as ideal markers in small RNA‐based applications for cancer detection. In this study, we first undertook small RNA sequencing to assess the expression of circulating small RNAs in the serum of BC patients and cancer‐free individuals (controls). Expression of 3 small RNAs, namely isomiR of miR‐21‐5p (3′ addition C), miR‐23a‐3p and tRF‐Lys (TTT), was significantly higher in BC samples and was validated by small RNA sequencing in an independent cohort. Our constructed model using 3 small RNAs showed high diagnostic accuracy with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.92 and discriminated early‐stage BCs at stage 0 from control. To test the possibility that these small RNAs are released from cancer cells, we next examined EVs from the serum of BC patients and controls. Two of the 3 candidate small RNAs were identified, and shown to be abundant in EVs of BC patients. Interestingly, these 2 small RNAs are also more abundantly detected in culture media of breast cancer cell lines (MCF‐7 and MDA‐MB‐231). The same tendency in selective elevation seen in total serum, serum EV, and EV derived from cell culture media could indicate the efficiency of this model using total serum of patients. These findings indicate that small RNAs serve as significant biomarkers for BC detection. EV small RNA in breast cancer can be found in serum small RNA biomarker.

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