The Roles of Micrornas in the Stemness of Oral Cancer Cells
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Date
2020
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
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Abstract
Oral cancer (OC), which is the most common form of head and neck cancers, has one of the lowest (similar to 50%) overall 5-year survival rates. The main reasons for this high mortality rate are diagnosis of OC in advanced stages in most patients and spread to distant organs via lymph node metastasis. Many studies have shown that a small population of cells within the tumor plays vital roles in the initiation, progression, and metastasis of the tumor, resistance to chemotherapeutic agents, and recurrence. These cells, identified as cancer stem cells (CSCs), are the main reasons for the failure of current treatment modalities. Deregulated expressions of microRNAs are closely related to tumor prognosis, metastasis and drug resistance. In addition, microRNAs play important roles in regulating the functions of CSCs. Until now, the roles of microRNAs in the acquisition and maintenance of OC stemness have not been elucidated in detail yet. Here in this review, we summarized significant findings and the latest literature to better understand the involvement of CSCs in association with dysregulated microRNAs in oral carcinogenesis. Possible roles of these microRNAs in acquisition and maintenance of CSCs features during OC pathogenesis were summarized.
Description
Karatas, Omer/0000-0002-0379-2088
ORCID
Keywords
Oral Cancer, Cancer Stem Cells, Micrornas, Sternness, Noncoding RNAs
Fields of Science
Citation
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Source
Oral Oncology
Volume
109
