Canonical microRNA loss drives tumor development implicating therapeutic efficacy of enoxacin in angiosarcoma

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Angiosarcoma (AS) is a rare and aggressive tumor arising within the endothelium, characterized by a high metastatic rate and poor prognosis. Our prior work established that endothelial loss of Dicer1 , a key enzyme in microRNA (miRNA) processing, drives AS formation in mice, indicating a tumor suppressive role for miRNAs in tumorigenesis. Here, we corroborated this hypothesis by generating a novel conditional knockout model targeting Dgcr8 , a core component of the microprocessor complex required for pri-miRNA processing. Conditional deletion of Dgcr8 phenocopies Dicer1 loss, resulting in spontaneous AS formation and global loss of mature miRNAs. We further demonstrate that treatment with enoxacin (ENX), a repurposed antibiotic known to enhance miRNA processing, reduces viability, migration, and clonogenicity of AS cells. ENX increases the abundance of tumor-suppressive miRNAs and downregulates oncogenic pathways, including pathways related to cell cycle progression, angiogenesis, and cell migration. These results establish the essential role of miRNA biogenesis in suppressing AS and reveal a pharmacologically targetable vulnerability via ENX-mediated enhancement of miRNA expression in tumors.

Article activity feed