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RETRACTED ARTICLE: Tumour-originated exosomal miR-155 triggers cancer-associated cachexia to promote tumour progression

Emerging evidence supports the pivotal roles of cancer-associated cachexia in breast cancer progression. However, the mediators and mechanisms that mediate cancer-induced cachexia remain unclear. Here, we show that breast cancer-derived exosomes alter adipocytes and muscle cells in terms of increase...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Molecular cancer 2018-10, Vol.17 (1), Article 155
Main Authors: Wu, Qi, Sun, Si, Li, Zhiyu, Yang, Qian, Li, Bei, Zhu, Shan, Wang, Lijun, Wu, Juan, Yuan, Jingping, Yang, Changhua, Li, Juanjuan, Sun, Shengrong
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Emerging evidence supports the pivotal roles of cancer-associated cachexia in breast cancer progression. However, the mediators and mechanisms that mediate cancer-induced cachexia remain unclear. Here, we show that breast cancer-derived exosomes alter adipocytes and muscle cells in terms of increased catabolism characterized by the release of metabolites. Likewise, tumour cells cocultivated with mature adipocytes or C2C12 exhibit an aggressive phenotype through inducing epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Mechanistically, we show that cancer cell-secreted miR-155 promotes beige/brown differentiation and remodel metabolism in resident adipocytes by downregulating the PPARγ expression, but does not significantly affect biological conversion in C2C12. In vitro the use of propranolol ameliorates tumour exosomes-associated cachectic wasting through upregulating the PPARγ expression. These results demonstrate that cancer-derived exosomes reprogram systemic energy metabolism and accelerate cancer-associated cachexia to facilitate tumour progression.
ISSN:1476-4598
1476-4598
DOI:10.1186/s12943-018-0899-5