MicroRNAs and cancer: what we know and what we still have to learn

A report on the Keystone Symposia on MicroRNAs and Cancer, Keystone, Colorado, USA, 10-15 June 2009.


Introduction
The organizers of the 2009 Keystone Symposia on MicroRNAs and Cancer assembled a fine panel of speakers, and the audience of more than 300 participants consisted mainly of young scientists, including graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and early career researchers, all fully convinced that the microRNA (miRNA) revolution in the field of cancer research has already arrived! The meeting had double the number of delegates of the previous meeting two years ago, proof that the scientific community is focused on understanding the roles of these small regulatory RNAs in human tumors. The meeting was organized in plenary sessions centered on the main research avenues, such as 'Regulation of development by miRNAs', 'Gene regulation by non-coding RNAs', 'MicroRNAs in cancer', 'Roles of small RNAs in cancer', and 'MicroRNAs as diagnostics and therapeutics'. In addition, workshops were held based on the most interesting posters and focusing on new topics related to clinical translation, such as 'Bench to bedside: translating miRNA discoveries into clinical applications', 'Hot topics in miRNA research' or 'Emerging ideas and technologies in small RNAs'. As proved by the previous enumeration, two new research directions were wisely selected by the organizers to be presented and discussed extensively -firstly, the clinical applications of the already overwhelming number of mechanistic discoveries related to miRNAs and, secondly, the involvement of other short or long non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) in human cancers and their potential use for patients. Clearly proving this research tendency was the selection, as Keynote address, of the seminal contribution of Joan Massague (Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA) on understanding the mechanisms of metastasis and of miRNA involvement in late-stage tumorigenesis.

Bench to bedside -microRNAs are already there!
The translational implications of miRNA research for cancer patients certainly represents one of the most exciting avenues of research due to its great diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic implications. Curtis C Harris (National Institute of Health, MD, USA) presented exciting new data, as well as previously published work, proving that miRNAs can be used as biomarkers of diagnosis, prog nosis and therapeutic outcome in lung, colon and esopha geal cancersall tumors with high incidence and high mortality. Frank Slack (Yale University, CN, USA) pre sen ted exciting results showing miR-34 effects linked to the response to radiation therapy in triple negative (estrogen receptor (ER)-, progesterone receptor (PR)-and human epidermal receptor 2 (HER2)-) breast cancer patients. Joshua Mendell (Johns Hopkins University, MD, USA) described the roles of Myc and p53 in the regulation of miRNA expression and the therapeutic consequences of restoring miR-26a in hepatocellular carcinomas; data pro duced in his and in Jerry Mendell's laboratories were published in Cell on the same day as the presentation. Carlo Croce (Ohio State University, OH, USA), whose pioneer work in 2002 initiated the field of microRNAs and cancer, elaborated on the mechanisms of miRNA alterations in human cancers, including gene deletions and germline mutations, and expanded the new concept that miRNAs are useful predic tors of metastatic potential and of response to therapy. Joanne Weidhaas (Yale University School of Medicine, CN, USA) presented the exciting findings that single nucleotide polymorphisms in a target site of KRAS for let-7 represent a biomarker for cancer risk, including cancers of the lung and breast. David Brown (Asuragen, TX, USA) presented the efforts of his team in their work to develop therapeutic applica tions for tumor suppressor miRNAs. A number of short talks during workshops specifically addressed the issue of translational research; among these, Dalia Cohen's talk (Rosetta Genomics, PA, USA) concerned the use of a miRNA signature that can identify tumor tissue origin, whereas Helen Henegen's

Understanding the mechanisms of miRNA dysregulation in human cancers
This represents an essential aspect of miRNA research, as understanding what causes aberration in miRNA expression to occur in cancer is helpful not only for oncology, but also for understanding the roles of miRNAs during normal development and differentiation. Scott Hammond (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA) presented evidence of a new mechanism that could explain the downregulation of suppressor miRNAs in human cancer, represented by Lin-28 regulation of RNase III Drosha. Sonia Mello (Catalan Institute of Oncology, Barcelona, Spain) presented an additional mechanism for impairment of microRNA processing and Dicer function in sporadic and hereditary carcinomas with microsatellite instability -the truncating mutations in TAR RNA-binding protein 2 (TRBP). Bringing a completely new and highly needed exper tise in the young field of miRNAs in cancer, RNA crystallography, Jennifer Doudna (Genentech, CA, USA) presented her lab's efforts to identify the architecture of human Dicer and partner proteins. Marianthi Kiriakidou (University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, PA, USA) focused on the roles of another protein involved in miRNA processing, Argonaute 2, and uncovered expression data for Ago2 in various human cancers.

Dissecting the roles of microRNAs in human cancers
This

Other non-coding RNAs and cancer
While the main focus at present is to understand the roles of miRNAs in cancer, there is still a lot of effort aimed at deciphering the complex ncRNA network, including short and long ncRNAs, which is, overall, altered in cancers. As happens in every 'MicroRNAs and Cancer' Keystone Symposium, the interconnections between the various talks and the ideas presented in both posters and during free discussions were very high; the audience certainly left not only with answers to some questions, but also with new questions to be answered that will undoubtedly lead to the development of alternative lines of research. This is indeed an exciting time, as the ncRNA revolution in cancer research is shifting the classic paradigms.