Cell Type-Specific Effects of miR-21 Loss Attenuate Tumor Progression in MYC-Driven Prostate Cancer
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Aberrant microRNA expression is common in cancer, yet cell-type-specific microRNA activity in the tumor microenvironment (TME) remains poorly understood. Here, we show that germline deletion of miR-21 significantly attenuated the progression of MYC-driven prostate cancer (PCa), reducing prostate weight, tumor burden, and proliferation index in Hi-Myc mice. In situ hybridization revealed elevated miR-21 expression in multiple cell types during disease progression. Inflammatory and premalignant lesions in mouse and human prostate showed increased miR-21 in both stroma and epithelium, with further enrichment in the stroma of invasive adenocarcinoma. In Hi-Myc mice, single cell RNA-sequencing revealed miR-21 gene regulation in neoplastic, stromal, and immune cells in a cell-type-specific manner, impacting both direct and indirect targets. Notably, miR-21 deletion reduced immune infiltration into the prostate TME, particularly Trem2 -expressing macrophages and regulatory T cells. The Timp1-fibroblast gene signature in MYC-driven PCa was suppressed in miR-21 knockout prostates. Cell-cell communication analysis showed that miR-21 suppressed TGF-beta signaling in the TME, partially through Ski and Smad7 suppression in cancer-associated fibroblasts. These findings underscore the crucial role of miR-21 in PCa and provide some of the first in situ insights into cell-type-specific miRNA activity in solid tumors.