MicroRNA-Based Methods and Compositions For the Diagnosis, Prognosis and Treatment of Breast Cancer

Abstract
The present invention provides novel methods and compositions for the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of breast cancer. The invention also provides methods of identifying anti-breast cancer agents.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Breast cancer is a significant health problem for women in the United States and throughout the world. Although advances have been made in the detection and treatment of the disease, breast cancer remains the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in women, affecting more than 180,000 women in the United States each year. For women in North America, the life-time odds of getting breast cancer are now one in eight.


No universally successful method for the treatment or prevention of breast cancer is currently available. Management of breast cancer currently relies on a combination of early diagnosis (for example, through routine breast screening procedures) and aggressive treatment, which may include one or more of a variety of treatments, such as surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and hormone therapy. The course of treatment for a particular breast cancer is often selected based on a variety of prognostic parameters including an analysis of specific tumor markers.


Although the discovery of BRCA1 and BRCA2 were important steps in identifying key genetic factors involved in breast cancer, it has become clear that mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 account for only a fraction of inherited susceptibility to breast cancer. In spite of considerable research into therapies for breast cancer, breast cancer remains difficult to diagnose and treat effectively, and the high mortality observed in breast cancer patients indicates that improvements are needed in the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of the disease.


MicroRNAs are a class of small, non-coding RNAs that control gene expression by hybridizing to and triggering either translational repression or, less frequently, degradation of a messenger RNA (mRNA) target. The discovery and study of miRNAs has revealed miRNA-mediated gene regulatory mechanisms that play important roles in organismal development and various cellular processes, such as cell differentiation, cell growth and cell death. Recent studies suggest that aberrant expression of particular miRNAs may be involved in human diseases, such as neurological disorders and cancer. In particular, misexpression of miR-16-1 and/or miR-15a has been found in human chronic lymphocytic leukemias.


The development and use of microarrays containing all known human microRNAs has permitted a simultaneous analysis of the expression of every miRNA in a sample. These microRNA microarrays have not only been used to confirm that miR-16-1 is deregulated in human CLL cells, but also to generate miRNA expression signatures that are associated with well-defined clinico-pathological features of human CLL.


The use of microRNA microarrays to identify a group of microRNAs, which are differentially-expressed between normal cells and breast cancer cells (for example, an expression signature or expression profile), may help pinpoint specific miRNAs that are involved in breast cancer. Furthermore, the identification of putative targets of these miRNAs may help to unravel their pathogenic role. The present invention provides novel methods and compositions for the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of breast cancer.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention is based, in part, on the identification of a breast cancer-specific signature of miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer cells, relative to normal control cells.


Accordingly, embodiments of the invention encompass methods of diagnosing whether a subject has, or is at risk for developing, breast cancer, comprising measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in a test sample from the subject and comparing the level of the miR gene product in the test sample to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample. An alteration (for example, an increase, a decrease) in the level of the miR gene product in the test sample, relative to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample, is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, breast cancer. In certain embodiments, the at least one miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-125b-1, miR125b-2, miR-145, miR-21, miR-155, miR-10b and combinations thereof.


The level of the at least one miR gene product can be measured using a variety of techniques that are well known to those of skill in the art. In one embodiment, the level of the at least one miR gene product is measured using Northern blot analysis. In another embodiment, the level of the at least one miR gene product is measured by reverse transcribing RNA from a test sample obtained from the subject to provide a set of target oligodeoxynucleotides, hybridizing the target oligodeoxynucleotides to a microarray that comprises miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides to provide a hybridization profile for the test sample, and comparing the test sample hybridization profile to a hybridization profile generated from a control sample. An alteration in the signal of at least one miRNA in the test sample relative to the control sample is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, breast cancer. In a particular embodiment, the microarray comprises miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides for a substantial portion of the human miRNome. In a further embodiment, the microarray comprises miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides for one or more miRNAs selected from the group consisting of miR-145, miR-21, miR-155, miR-10b, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, miR-213, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-101-1, miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-143, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-205, miR-206, miR-210 and combinations thereof.


Embodiments of the invention also provide methods of diagnosing a breast cancer associated with one or more prognostic markers, comprising measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in a breast cancer test sample from a subject and comparing the level of the at least one miR gene product in the breast cancer test sample to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample. The breast cancer can be associated with one or more adverse prognostic markers associated with breast cancer, such as, but not limited to, estrogen receptor expression, progesterone receptor expression, positive lymph node metastasis, high proliferative index, detectable p53 expression, advanced tumor stage, and high vascular invasion. In one embodiment, the level of the at least one miR gene product is measured by reverse transcribing RNA from a test sample obtained from the subject to provide a set of target oligodeoxynucleotides, hybridizing the target oligodeoxynucleotides to a microarray that comprises miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides to provide a hybridization profile for the test sample, and comparing the test sample hybridization profile to a hybridization profile generated from a control sample. An alteration in the signal of at least one miRNA in the test sample relative to the control sample is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, a breast cancer associated with the one or more prognostic markers. In a particular embodiment, the microarray comprises at least one miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotide for a miRNA selected from the group consisting of miR-26a, miR-26b, miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-30a-5p, miR-30b, miR-30c, miR-30d, miR-185, miR-191, miR-206, miR-212, let-7c, miR-9-2, miR-15-a, miR-21, miR-30a-s, miR-133a-1, miR-137, miR-153-2, miR-154, miR-181a, miR-203, miR-213, let-7f-1, let-7a-3, let-7a-2, miR-9-3, miR-10b, miR-27a, miR-29a, miR-123, miR-205, let-7d, miR-145, miR-16a, miR-128b and combinations thereof.


Embodiments of the invention also encompass methods of treating breast cancer in a subject, wherein at least one miR gene product is de-regulated (for example, down-regulated, up-regulated) in the cancer cells of the subject. When the at least one isolated miR gene product is down-regulated in the breast cancer cells, the method comprises administering an effective amount of the at least one isolated miR gene product, such that proliferation of cancer cells in the subject is inhibited. In one embodiment, the method comprises administering an effective amount of the at least one isolated miR gene product, provided that the miR gene is not miR-15a or miR-16-1, such that proliferation of cancer cells in the subject is inhibited. When the at least one isolated miR gene product is up-regulated in the cancer cells, the method comprises administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one compound for inhibiting expression of the at least one miR gene, such that proliferation of breast cancer cells is inhibited.


In related embodiments, the invention provides methods of treating breast cancer in a subject, comprising determining the amount of at least one miR gene product in breast cancer cells from the subject, relative to control cells. If expression of the miR gene product is deregulated in breast cancer cells, the methods further comprise altering the amount of the at least one miR gene product expressed in the breast cancer cells. If the amount of the miR gene product expressed in the cancer cells is less than the amount of the miR gene product expressed in control cells, the method comprises administering an effective amount of at least one isolated miR gene product. In one embodiment, the miR gene product is not miR-15a or miR-16-1. If the amount of the miR gene product expressed in the cancer cells is greater than the amount of the miR gene product expressed in control cells, the method comprises administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one compound for inhibiting expression of the at least one miR gene. In one embodiment, the miR gene product is not miR-15a or miR-16-1.


The invention further provides pharmaceutical compositions for treating breast cancer. In one embodiment, the pharmaceutical compositions comprise at least one isolated miR gene product and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier. In a particular embodiment, the at least one miR gene product corresponds to a miR gene product that has a decreased level of expression in breast cancer cells relative to suitable control cells. In certain embodiments the isolated miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-145, miR-10b, miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, miR-101-1, miR-143 and combinations thereof.


In another embodiment, the pharmaceutical compositions of the invention comprise at least one miR expression inhibition compound. In a particular embodiment, the at least one miR expression inhibition compound is specific for a miR gene whose expression is greater in breast cancer cells than control cells. In certain embodiments, the miR expression inhibition compound is specific for one or more miR gene products selected from the group consisting of miR-21, miR-155, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-213, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210, miR-213 and combinations thereof.


Embodiments of the invention also encompass methods of identifying an anti-breast cancer agent, comprising providing a test agent to a cell and measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in the cell. In one embodiment, the method comprises providing a test agent to a cell and measuring the level of at least one miR gene product associated with decreased expression levels in breast cancer cells. An increase in the level of the miR gene product in the cell, relative to a suitable control cell, is indicative of the test agent being an anti-breast cancer agent. In a particular embodiment, the at least one miR gene product associated with decreased expression levels in breast cancer cells is selected from the group consisting of miR-145, miR-10b, miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, miR-101-1, miR-143 and combinations thereof.


In other embodiments the method comprises providing a test agent to a cell and measuring the level of at least one miR gene product associated with increased expression levels in breast cancer cells. A decrease in the level of the miR gene product in the cell, relative to a suitable control cell, is indicative of the test agent being an anti-breast cancer agent. In a particular embodiment, at least one miR gene product associated with increased expression levels in breast cancer cells is selected from the group consisting of miR-21, miR-155, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-213, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210, miR-213 and combinations thereof.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.



FIG. 1 depicts a tree generated by cluster analysis showing a separation of breast cancer from normal tissues on the basis of differential microRNA expression (P<0.05). The bar at the bottom of the figure indicates the group of cancer (red) or normal breast tissues (yellow).



FIG. 2 is a graph depicting the probability (0.0 to 1.0) of each sample being a cancerous or normal tissue based on PAM analysis. All breast cancer and normal tissues were correctly predicted by the miR signature shown in Table 2.



FIG. 3A is a Northern blot depicting the expression level of miR-125b, using a miR-125b complementary probe, in a normal sample, as well as several tumor samples from breast cancer patients (P). The U6 probe was used for normalization of expression levels for each sample.



FIG. 3B is a Northern blot depicting the expression level of miR-145, using a miR-145 complementary probe, in a normal sample, as well as several tumor samples from breast cancer patients (P). The U6 probe was used for normalization of expression levels for each sample.



FIG. 3C is a Northern blot depicting the expression level of miR-21, using a miR-21 complementary probe, in a normal sample, as well as several tumor samples from breast cancer patients (labeled as numbered patients). The U6 probe was used for normalization of expression levels for each sample.



FIG. 3D is a Northern blot depicting the expression levels of microRNAs miR-125b, miR-145 and miR-21 in various breast cancer cell lines. The expression level of each microRNA was also determined in a sample from normal tissues. The U6 probe was used for normalization of expression levels for each sample.



FIG. 4A is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with the presence (ER+) or absence (ER−) of estrogen receptor.



FIG. 4B is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with the presence (PR+) or absence (PR−) of progesterone receptor.



FIG. 4C is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with stage 1 (pT1) or stage 2 or 3 (pT2-3) tumors.



FIG. 4D is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with the presence (pN0) or absence (pN10+) of lymph node metastasis.



FIG. 4E is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with the presence or absence of vascular invasion.



FIG. 4F is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with a high (MIB-1>30) or low (MIB-1<20) proliferative index (PI).



FIG. 4G is a table listing miRNAs that are differentially-expressed in breast cancer samples associated with positive (p53+) or negative (p53−) immunostaining of p53.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention is based, in part, on the identification of particular miRNAs whose expression is altered in breast cancer cells relative to normal control cells, and microRNAs whose expression is altered in breast cancer cells associated with particular prognostic features, relative to breast cancer cells lacking such features.


As used herein interchangeably, a “miR gene product,” “microRNA,” “miR,” or “miRNA” refers to the unprocessed or processed RNA transcript from an miR gene. As the miR gene products are not translated into protein, the term “miR gene products” does not include proteins. The unprocessed miR gene transcript is also called an “miR precursor,” and typically comprises an RNA transcript of about 70-100 nucleotides in length. The miR precursor can be processed by digestion with an RNAse (for example, Dicer, Argonaut, or RNAse III, for example, E. coli RNAse III)) into an active 19-25 nucleotide RNA molecule. This active 19-25 nucleotide RNA molecule is also called the “processed” miR gene transcript or “mature” miRNA.


The active 19-25 nucleotide RNA molecule can be obtained from the miR precursor through natural processing routes (for example, using intact cells or cell lysates) or by synthetic processing routes (for example, using isolated processing enzymes, such as isolated Dicer, Argonaut, or RNAase III). It is understood that the active 19-25 nucleotide RNA molecule can also be produced directly by biological or chemical synthesis, without having been processed from the miR precursor.


The sequences of 187 miR gene products are provided in Table 1. All nucleic acid sequences herein are given in the 5′ to 3′ direction. In addition, genes are represented by italics, and gene products are represented by normal type; for example, mir-17 is the gene and miR-17 is the gene product.


The present invention encompasses methods of diagnosing whether a subject has, or is at risk for developing, breast cancer, comprising measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in a test sample from the subject and comparing the level of the miR gene product in the test sample to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample. As used herein, a “subject” can be any mammal that has, or is suspected of having, breast cancer. In a particular embodiment, the subject is a human who has, or is suspected of having, breast cancer.


The breast cancer can be any form of breast cancer and may be associated with one or more prognostic markers or features, including, but not limited to, estrogen receptor expression, progesterone receptor expression, lymph node metastasis, high proliferative index, detectable p53 expression, advanced tumor stage, and high vascular invasion. The prognostic marker can be associated with an adverse or negative prognosis, or it may be associated with a good or positive prognosis.









TABLE 1







Human miR Gene Product Sequences











SEQ ID


Name
Precursor Sequence (5′ to 3′)*
NO.












hsa-let-7a-1-prec
CACTGTGGGATGAGGTAGTAGGTTGTATAGTTTTAGGGTCACACCCACCACT
1



GGGAGATAACTATACAATCTACTGTCTTTCCTAACGTG






hsa-let-7a-2-prec
AGGTTGAGGTAGTAGGTTGTATAGTTTAGAATTACATCAAGGGAGATAACTG
2



TACAGCCTCCTAGCTTTCCT






hsa-let-7a-3-prec
GGGTGAGGTAGTAGGTTGTATAGTTTGGGGCTCTGCCCTGCTATGGGATAAC
3



TATACAATCTACTGTCTTTCCT






hsa-let-7a-4-prec
GTGACTGCATGCTCCCAGGTTGAGGTAGTAGGTTGTATAGTTTAGAATTACA
4



CAAGGGAGATAACTGTACAGCCTCCTAGCTTTCCTTGGGTCTTGCACTAAAC




AAC






hsa-let-7b-prec
GGCGGGGTGAGGTAGTAGGTTGTGTGGTTTCAGGGCAGTGATGTTGCCCCTC
5



GGAAGATAACTATACAACCTACTGCCTTCCCTG






hsa-let-7c-prec
GCATCCGGGTTGAGGTAGTAGGTTGTATGGTTTAGAGTTACACCCTGGGAGT
6



TAACTGTACAACCTTCTAGCTTTCCTTGGAGC






hsa-let-7d-prec
CCTAGGAAGAGGTAGTAGGTTGCATAGTTTTAGGGCAGGGATTTTGCCCACA
7



AGGAGGTAACTATACGACCTGCTGCCTTTCTTAGG






hsa-let-7d-v1-
CTAGGAAGAGGTAGTAGTTTGCATAGTTTTAGGGCAAAGATTTTGCCCACAA
8


prec
GTAGTTAGCTATACGACCTGCAGCCTTTTGTAG






hsa-let-7d-v2-
CTGGCTGAGGTAGTAGTTTGTGCTGTTGGTCGGGTTGTGACATTGCCCGCTGT
9


prec
GGAGATAACTGCGCAAGCTACTGCCTTGCTAG






hsa-let-7e-prec
CCCGGGCTGAGGTAGGAGGTTGTATAGTTGAGGAGGACACCCAAGGAGATC
10



ACTATACGGCCTCCTAGCTTTCCCCAGG






hsa-let-7f-1-prec
TCAGAGTGAGGTAGTAGATTGTATAGTTGTGGGGTAGTGATTTTACCCTGTT
11



CAGGAGATAACTATACAATCTATTGCCTTCCCTGA






hsa-let-7f-2-prec
CTGTGGGATGAGGTAGTAGATTGTATAGTTGTGGGGTAGTGATTTTACCCTG
12



TTCAGGAGATAACTATACAATCTATTGCCTTCCCTGA






hsa-let-7f-2-prec
CTGTGGGATGAGGTAGTAGATTGTATAGTTTTAGGGTCATACCCCATCTTGG
13



AGATAACTATACAGTCTACTGTCTTTCCCACGG






hsa-let-7g-prec
TTGCCTGATTCCAGGCTGAGGTAGTAGTTTGTACAGTTTGAGGGTCTATGAT
14



ACCACCCGGTACAGGAGATAACTGTACAGGCCACTGCCTTGCCAGGAACAG




CGCGC






hsa-let-7i-prec
CTGGCTGAGGTAGTAGTTTGTGCTGTTGGTCGGGTTGTGACATTGCCCGCTGT
15



GGAGATAACTGCGCAAGCTACTGCCTTGCTAG






hsa-mir-001b-1-
ACCTACTCAGAGTACATACTTCTTTATGTACCCATATGAACATACAATGCTAT
16


prec

GGAATGTAAAGAAGTATGTATTTTTGGTAGGC







hsa-mir-001b-1-
CAGCTAACAACTTAGTAATACCTACTCAGAGTACATACTTCTTTATGTACCCA
17


prec
TATGAACATACAATGCTATGGAATGTAAAGAAGTATGTATTTTTGGTAGGCA




ATA






hsa-mir-001b-2-
GCCTGCTTGGGAAACATACTTCTTTATATGCCCATATGGACCTGCTAAGCTAT
18


prec

GGAATGTAAAGAAGTATGTATCTCAGGCCGGG







hsa-mir-001b-
TGGGAAACATACTTCTTTATATGCCCATATGGACCTGCTAAGCTATGGAATG
19


prec

TAAAGAAGTATGTATCTCA







hsa-mir-001d-
ACCTACTCAGAGTACATACTTCTTTATGTACCCATATGAACATACAATGCTAT
20


prec

GGAATGTAAAGAAGTATGTATTTTTGGTAGGC







hsa-mir-007-1
TGGATGTTGGCCTAGTTCTGTGTGGAAGACTAGTGATTTTGTTGTTTTTAGAT
21



AACTAAATCGACAACAAATCACAGTCTGCCATATGGCACAGGCCATGCCTCT




ACA






hsa-mir-007-1-
TTGGATGTTGGCCTAGTTCTGTGTGGAAGACTAGTGATTTTGTTGTTTTTAGA
22


prec
TAACTAAATCGACAACAAATCACAGTCTGCCATATGGCACAGGCCATGCCTC




TACAG






hsa-mir-007-2
CTGGATACAGAGTGGACCGGCTGGCCCCATCTGGAAGACTAGTGATTTTGTT
23



GTTGTCTTACTGCGCTCAACAACAAATCCCAGTCTACCTAATGGTGCCAGCC




ATCGCA






hsa-mir-007-2-
CTGGATACAGAGTGGACCGGCTGGCCCCATCTGGAAGACTAGTGATTTTGTT
24


prec
GTTGTCTTACTGCGCTCAACAACAAATCCCAGTCTACCTAATGGTGCCAGCC




ATCGCA






hsa-mir-007-3
AGATTAGAGTGGCTGTGGTCTAGTGCTGTGTGGAAGACTAGTGATTTTGTTG
25



TTCTGATGTACTACGACAACAAGTCACAGCCGGCCTCATAGCGCAGACTCCC




TTCGAC






hsa-mir-007-3-
AGATTAGAGTGGCTGTGGTCTAGTGCTGTGTGGAAGACTAGTGATTTTGTTG
26


prec
TTCTGATGTACTACGACAACAAGTCACAGCCGGCCTCATAGCGCAGACTCCC




TTCGAC






hsa-mir-009-1
CGGGGTTGGTTGTTATCTTTGGTTATCTAGCTGTATGAGTGGTGTGGAGTCTT
27



CATAAAGCTAGATAACCGAAAGTAAAAATAACCCCA






hsa-mir-009-2
GGAAGCGAGTTGTTATCTTTGGTTATCTAGCTGTATGAGTGTATTGGTCTTCA
28



TAAAGCTAGATAACCGAAAGTAAAAACTCCTTCA






hsa-mir-009-3
GGAGGCCCGTTTCTCTCTTTGGTTATCTAGCTGTATGAGTGCCACAGAGCCGT
29



CATAAAGCTAGATAACCGAAAGTAGAAATGATTCTCA






hsa-mir-010a-
GATCTGTCTGTCTTCTGTATATACCCTGTAGATCCGAATTTGTGTAAGGAATT
30


prec
TTGTGGTCACAAATTCGTATCTAGGGGAATATGTAGTTGACATAAACACTCC




GCTCT






hsa-mir-010b-
CCAGAGGTTGTAACGTTGTCTATATATACCCTGTAGAACCGAATTTGTGTGG
31


prec
TATCCGTATAGTCACAGATTCGATTCTAGGGGAATATATGGTCGATGCAAAA




ACTTCA






hsa-mir-015a-2-
GCGCGAATGTGTGTTTAAAAAAAATAAAACCTTGGAGTAAAGTAGCAGCAC
32


prec

ATAATGGTTTGTGGATTTTGAAAAGGTGCAGGCCATATTGTGCTGCCTCAAA





AATAC






hsa-mir-015a-
CCTTGGAGTAAAGTAGCAGCACATAATGGTTTGTGGATTTTGAAAAGGTGCA
33


prec
GGCCATATTGTGCTGCCTCAAAAATACAAGG






hsa-mir-015b-
CTGTAGCAGCACATCATGGTTTACATGCTACAGTCAAGATGCGAATCATTAT
34


prec
TTGCTGCTCTAG






hsa-mir-015b-
TTGAGGCCTTAAAGTACTGTAGCAGCACATCATGGTTTACATGCTACAGTCA
35


prec
AGATGCGAATCATTATTTGCTGCTCTAGAAATTTAAGGAAATTCAT






hsa-mir-016a-
GTCAGCAGTGCCTTAGCAGCACGTAAATATTGGCGTTAAGATTCTAAAATTA
36


chr13
TCTCCAGTATTAACTGTGCTGCTGAAGTAAGGTTGAC






hsa-mir-016b-
GTTCCACTCTAGCAGCACGTAAATATTGGCGTAGTGAAATATATATTAAACA
37


chr3
CCAATATTACTGTGCTGCTTTAGTGTGAC






hsa-mir-016-
GCAGTGCCTTAGCAGCACGTAAATATTGGCGTTAAGATTCTAAAATTATCTC
38


prec-13
CAGTATTAACTGTGCTGCTGAAGTAAGGT






hsa-mit-017-prec
GTCAGAATAATGTCAAAGTGCTTACAGTGCAGGTAGTGATATGTGCATCTAC
39




TGCAGTGAAGGCACTTGTAGCATTATGGTGAC







hsa-mir-018-prec
TGTTCTAAGGTGCATCTAGTGCAGATAGTGAAGTAGATTAGCATCTACTGCC
40



CTAAGTGCTCCTTCTGGCA






hsa-mir-018-
TTTTTGTTCTAAGGTGCATCTAGTGCAGATAGTGAAGTAGATTAGCATCTACT
41


prec-13
GCCCTAAGTGCTCCTTCTGGCATAAGAA






hsa-mir-019a-
GCAGTCCTCTGTTAGTTTTGCATAGTTGCACTACAAGAAGAATGTAGTTGTG
42


prec

CAAATCTATGCAAAACTGATGGTGGCCTGC







hsa-mir-019a-
CAGTCCTCTGTTAGTTTTGCATAGTTGCACTACAAGAAGAATGTAGTTGTGC
43


prec-13

AAATCTATGCAAAACTGATGGTGGCCTG







hsa-mir-019b-1-
CACTGTTCTATGGTTAGTTTTGCAGGTTTGCATCCAGCTGTGTGATATTCTGC
44


prec

TGTGCAAATCCATGCAAAACTGACTGTGGTAGTG







hsa-mir-019b-2-
ACATTGCTACTTACAATTAGTTTTGCAGGTTTGCATTTCAGCGTATATATGTA
45


prec
TATGTGGCTGTGCAAATCCATGCAAAACTGATTGTGATAATGT






hsa-mir-019b-
TTCTATGGTTAGTTTTGCAGGTTTGCATCCAGCTGTGTGATATTCTGCTGTGC
46


prec-13

AAATCCATGCAAAACTGACTGTGGTAG







hsa-mir-019b-
TTACAATTAGTTTTGCAGGTTTGCATTTCAGCGTATATATGTATATGTGGCTG
47


prec--X

TGCAAATCCATGCAAAACTGATTGTGAT







hsa-mir-020-prec
GTAGCACTAAAGTGCTTATAGTGCAGGTAGTGTTTAGTTATCTACTGCATTAT
48



GAGCACTTAAAGTACTGC






hsa-mir-021-prec
TGTCGGGTAGCTTATCAGACTGATGTTGACTGTTGAATCTCATGGCAACACC
49



AGTCGATGGGCTGTCTGACA






hsa-mir-021-
ACCTTGTCGGGTAGCTTATCAGACTGATGTTGACTGTTGAATCTCATGGCAA
50


prec-17
CACCAGTCGATGGGCTGTCTGACATTTTG






hsa-mir-022-prec
GGCTGAGCCGCAGTAGTTCTTCAGTGGCAAGCTTTATGTCCTGACCCAGCTA
51




AAGCTGCCAGTTGAAGAACTGTTGCCCTCTGCC







hsa-mir-023a-
GGCCGGCTGGGGTTCCTGGGGATGGGATTTGCTTCCTGTCACAAATCACATT
52


prec

GCCAGGGATTTCCAACCGACC







hsa-mir-023b-
CTCAGGTGCTCTGGCTGCTTGGGTTCCTGGCATGCTGATTTGTGACTTAAGAT
53


prec
TAAAATCACATTGCCAGGGATTACCACGCAACCACGACCTTGGC






hsa-mir-023-
CCACGGCCGGCTGGGGTTCCTGGGGATGGGATTTGCTTCCTGTCACAAATCA
54


prec-19

CATTGCCAGGGATTTCCAACCGACCCTGA







hsa-mir-024-1-
CTCCGGTGCCTACTGAGCTGATATCAGTTCTCATTTTACACACTGGCTCAGTT
55


prec

CAGCAGGAACAGGAG







hsa-mir-024-2-
CTCTGCCTCCCGTGCCTACTGAGCTGAAACACAGTTGGTTTGTGTACACTGGC
56


prec

TCAGTTCAGCAGGAACAGGG







hsa-mir-024-
CCCTGGGCTCTGCCTCCCGTGCCTACTGAGCTGAAACACAGTTGGTTTGTGTA
57


prec-19
CACTGGCTCAGTTCAGCAGGAACAGGGG






hsa-mir-024-
CCCTCCGGTGCCTACTGAGCTGATATCAGTTCTCATTTTACACACTGGCTCAG
58


prec-9

TTCAGCAGGAACAGCATC







hsa-mir-025-prec
GGCCAGTGTTGAGAGGCGGAGACTTGGGCAATTGCTGGACGCTGCCCTGGG
59




CATTGCACTTGTCTCGGTCTGACAGTGCCGGCC







hsa-mir-026a-
AGGCCGTGGCCTCGTTCAAGTAATCCAGGATAGGCTGTGCAGGTCCCAATGG
60


prec
CCTATCTTGGTTACTTGCACGGGGACGCGGGCCT






hsa-mir-026b-
CCGGGACCCAGTTCAAGTAATTCAGGATAGGTTGTGTGCTGTCCAGCCTGTT
61


prec
CTCCATTACTTGGCTCGGGGACCGG






hsa-mir-027a-
CTGAGGAGCAGGGCTTAGCTGCTTGTGAGCAGGGTCCACACCAASGTCGTGTT
62


prec

CACAGTGGCTAAGTTCCGCCCCCCAG







hsa-mir-027b-
AGGTGCAGAGCTTAGCTGATTGGTGAACAGTGATTGGTTTCCGCTTTGTTCA
63


prec

CAGTGGCTAAGTTCTGCACCT







hsa-mir-027b-
ACCTCTCTAACAAGGTGCAGAGCTTAGCTGATTGGTGAACAGTGATTGGTTT
64


prec
CCGCTTTGTTCACAGTGGCTAAGTTCTGCACCTGAAGAGAAGGTG






hsa-mir-027-
CCTGAGGAGCAGGGCTTAGCTGCTTGTGAGCAGGGTCCACACCAAGTCGTGT
65


prec-19

TCACAGTGGCTAAGTTCCGCCCCCCAGG







hsa-mir-028-prec
GGTCCTTGCCCTCAAGGAGCTCACAGTCTATTGAGTTACCTTTCTGACTTTCC
66



CACTAGATTGTGAGCTCCTGGAGGGCAGGCACT






hsa-mir-029a-2
CCTTCTGTGACCCCTTAGAGGATGACTGATTTCTTTTGGTGTTCAGAGTCAAT
67



ATAATTTTCTAGCACCATCTGAAATCGGTTATAATGATTGGGGAAGAGCACC




ATG






hsa-mir-029a-
ATGACTGATTTCTTTTGGTGTTCAGAGTCAATATAATTTTCTAGCACCATCTG
68


prec

AAATCGGTTAT







hsa-mir-029c-
ACCACTGGCCCATCTCTTACACAGGCTGACCGATTTCTCCTGGTGTTCAGAGT
69


prec
CTGTTTTTGTCTAGCACCATTTGAAATCGGTTATGATGTAGGGGGAAAAGCA




GCAGC






hsa-mir-030a-
GCGACTGTAAACATCCTCGACTGGAAGCTGTGAAGCCACAGATGGGCTTTCA
70


prec

GTCGGATGTTTGCAGCTGC







hsa-mir-030b-
ATGTAAACATCCTACACTCAGCTGTAATACATGGATTGGCTGGGAGGTGGAT
71


prec
GTTTACGT






hsa-mir-030b-
ACCAAGTTTCAGTTCATGTAAACATCCTACACTCAGCTGTAATACATGGATT
72


prec
GGCTGGGAGGTGGATGTTTACTTCAGCTGACTTGGA






hsa-mir-030c-
AGATACTGTAAACATCCTACACTCTCAGCTGTGGAAAGTAAGAAAGCTGGG
73


prec
AGAAGGCTGTTTACTCTTTCT






hsa-mir-030d-
GTTGTTGTAAACATCCCCGACTGGAAGCTGTAAGACACAGCTAAGCTTTCAG
74


prec
TCAGATGTTTGCTGCTAC






hsa-mir-031-prec
GGAGAGGAGGCAAGATGCTGGCATAGCTGTTGAACTGGGAACCTGCTATGC
75



CAACATATTGCCATCTTTCC






hsa-mir-032-prec
GGAGATATTGCACATTACTAAGTTGCATGTTGTCACGGCCTCAATGCAATTT
76



AGTGTGTGTGATATTTTC






hsa-mir-033b-
GGGGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGGCGGCCCCGCGGTGCATTGCTGTTGCATTGCAC
77


prec
GTGTGTGAGGCGGGTGCAGTGCCTCGGCAGTGCAGCCCGGAGCCGGCCCCT




GGCACCAC






hsa-mir-033-prec
CTGTGGTGCATTGTAGTTGCATTGCATGTTCTGGTGGTACCCATGCAATGTTT
78



CCACAGTGCATCACAG






hsa-mir-034-prec
GGCCAGCTGTGAGTGTTTCTTTGGCAGTGTCTTAGCTGGTTGTTGTGAGCAAT
79



AGTAAGGAAGCAATCAGCAAGTATACTGCCCTAGAAGTGCTGCACGTTGTG




GGGCCC






hsa-mir-091-
TCAGAATAATGTCAAAGTGCTTACAGTGCAGGTAGTGATATGTGCATCTACT
80


prec-13
GCAGTGAAGGCACTTGTAGCATTATGGTGA






hsa-mir-092-
CTTTCTACACAGGTTGGGATCGGTTGCAATGCTGTGTTTCTGTATGGTATTGC
81


prec-13 = 092-1

ACTTGTCCCGGCCTGTTGAGTTTGG







hsa-mir-092-
TCATCCCTGGGTGGGGATTTGTTGCATTACTTGTGTTCTATATAAAGTATTGC
82


prec-X = 092-2

ACTTGTCCCGGCCTGTGGAAGA







hsa-mir-093-
CTGGGGGCTCCAAAGTGCTGTTCGTGCAGGTAGTGTGATTACCCAACCTACT
83


prec-7.1 = 093-1
GCTGAGCTAGCACTTCCCGAGCCCCCGG






hsa-mir-093-
CTGGGGGCTCCAAAGTGCTGTTCGTGCAGGTAGTGTGATTACCCAACCTACT
84


prec-7.2 = 093-2
GCTGAGCTAGCACTTCCCGAGCCCCCGG






hsa-mir-095-
AACACAGTGGGCACTCAATAAATGTCTGTTGAATTGAAATGCGTTACATTCA
85


prec-4

ACGGGTATTTATTGAGCACCCACTCTGTG







hsa-mir-096-
TGGCCGATTTTGGCACTAGCACATTTTTGCTTGTGTCTCTCCGCTCTGAGCAA
86


prec-7
TCATGTGCAGTGCCAATATGGGAAA






hsa-mir-098-
GTGAGGTAGTAAGTTGTATTGTTGTGGGGTAGGGATATTAGGCCCCAATTAG
87


prec-X
AAGATAACTATACAACTTACTACTTTCC






hsa-mir-099b-
GGCACCCACCCGTAGAACCGACCTTGCGGGGCCTTCGCCGCACACAAGCTCG
88


prec-19
TGTCTGTGGGTCCGTGTC






hsa-mir-099-
CCCATTGGCATAAACCCGTAGATCCGATCTTGTGGTGAAGTGGACCGCACAA
89


prec-21
GCTCGCTTCTATGGGTCTGTGTCAGTGTG






hsa-mir-100-1/2-
AAGAGAGAAGATATTGAGGCCTGTTGCCACAAACCCGTAGATCCGAACTTGT
90


prec

GGTATTAGTCCGCACAAGCTTGTATCTATAGGTATGTGTCTGTTAGGCAATCT





CAC






hsa-mir-100-
CCTGTTGCCACAAACCCGTAGATCCGAACTTGTGGTATTAGTCCGCACAAGC
91


prec-11
TTGTATCTATAGGTATGTGTCTGTTAGG






hsa-mir-101-1/2-
AGGCTGCCCTGGCTCAGTTATCACAGTGCTGATGCTGTCTATTCTAAAGGTA
92


prec

CAGTACTGTGATAACTGAAGGATGGCAGCCATCTTACCTTCCATCAGAGGAG





CCTCAC






hsa-mir-101-prec
TCAGTTATCACAGTGCTGATGCTGTCCATTCTAAAGGTACAGTACTGTGATA
93




ACTGA







hsa-mir-101-
TGCCCTGGCTCAGTTATCACAGTGCTGATGCTGTCTATTCTAAAGGTACAGTA
94


prec-1

CTGTGATAACTGAAGGATGGCA







hsa-mir-101-
TGTCCTTTTTCGGTTATCATGGTACCGATGCTGTATATCTGAAAGGTACAGTA
95


prec-9

CTGTGATAACTGAAGAATGGTG







hsa-mir-102-
CTTCTGGAAGCTGGTTTCACATGGTGGCTTAGATTTTTCCATCTTTGTATCTA
96


prec-1

GCACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTTTAGGAG







hsa-mir-102-
CTTCAGGAAGCTGGTTTCATATGGTGGTTTAGATTTAAATAGTGATTGTCTAG
97


prec-7.1

CACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTCTTGGGGG







hsa-mir-102-
CTTCAGGAAGCTGGTTTCATATGGTGGTTTAGATTTAAATAGTGATTGTCTAG
98


prec-7.2

CACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTCTTGGGGG







hsa-mir-103-2-
TTGTGCTTTCAGCTTCTTTACAGTGCTGCCTTGTAGCATTCAGGTCAAGCAAC
99


prec

ATTGTACAGGGCTATGAAAGAACCA







hsa-mir-103-
TTGTGCTTTCAGCTTCTTTACAGTGCTGCCTTGTAGCATTCAGGTCAAGCAAC
100


prec-20

ATTGTACAGGGCTATGAAAGAACCA







hsa-mir-103-
TACTGCCCTCGGCTTCTTTACAGTGCTGCCTTGTTGCATATGGATCAAGCAGC
101


prec-5 = 103-1

ATTGTACAGGGCTATGAAGGCATTG







hsa-mir-104-
AAATGTCAGACAGCCCATCGACTGGTGTTGCCATGAGATTCAACAGTCAACA
102


prec-17

TCAGTCTGATAAGCTACCCGACAAGG







hsa-mir-105-
TGTGCATCGTGGTCAAATGCTCAGACTCCTGTGGTGGCTGCTCATGCACCAC
103


prec-X.1 = 105-1
GGATGTTTGAGCATGTGCTACGGTGTCTA






hsa-mir-105-
TGTGCATCGTGGTCAAATGCTCAGACTCCTGTGGTGGCTGCTCATGCACCAC
104


prec-X.2 = 105-2
GGATGTTTGAGCATGTGCTACGGTGTCTA






hsa-mir-106-
CCTTGGCCATGTAAAAGTGCTTACAGTGCAGGTAGCTTTTTGAGATCTACTG
105


prec-X
CAATGTAAGCACTTCTTACATTACCATGG






hsa-mir-107-
CTCTCTGCTTTCAGCTTCTTTACAGTGTTGCCTTGTGGCATGGAGTTCAAGCA
106


prec-10

GCATTGTACAGGGCTATCAAAGCACAGA







hsa-mir-122a-
CCTTAGCAGAGCTGTGGAGTGTGACAATGGTGTTTGTGTCTAAACTATCAAA
107


prec
CGCCATTATCACACTAAATAGCTACTGCTAGGC






hsa-mir-122a-
AGCTGTGGAGTGTGACAATGGTGTTTGTGTCCAAACTATCAAACGCCATTAT
108


prec
CACACTAAATAGCT






hsa-mir-123-prec
ACATTATTACTTTTGGTACGCGCTGTGACACTTCAAACTCGTACCGTGAGTAA
109



TAATGCGC






hsa-mir-124a-1-
tccttcctCAGGAGAAAGGCCTCTCTCTCCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTAAA
110


prec
TGTCCATACAATTAAGGCACGCGGTGAATGCCAAGAATGGGGCT






hsa-mir-124a-1-
AGGCCTCTCTCTCCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTAAATGTCCATACAATT
111


prec

AAGGCACGCGGTGAATGCCAAGAATGGGGCTG







hsa-mir-124a-2-
ATCAAGATTAGAGGCTCTGCTCTCCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTAATGT
112


prec
CATACAATTAAGGCACGCGGTGAATGCCAAGAGCGGAGCCTACGGCTGCAC




TTGAAG






hsa-mir-124a-3-
CCCGCCCCAGCCCTGAGGGCCCCTCTGCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTA
113


prec
ATGTCTATACAATTAAGGCACGCGGTGAATGCCAAGAGAGGCGCCTCCGCC




GCTCCTT






hsa-mir-124a-3-
TGAGGGCCCCTCTGCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTAATGTCTATACAATT
114


prec

AAGGCACGCGGTGAATGCCAAGAGAGGCGCCTCC







hsa-mir-124a-
CTCTGCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTAATGTCTATACAATTAAGGCACG
115


prec

CGGTGAATGCCAAGAG







hsa-mir-124b-
CTCTCCGTGTTCACAGCGGACCTTGATTTAATGTCATACAATTAAGGCACGC
116


prec

GGTGAATGCCAAGAG







hsa-mir-125a-
TGCCAGTCTCTAGGTCCCTGAGACCCTTTAACCTGTGAGGACATCCAGGGTC
117


prec
ACAGGTGAGGTTCTTGGGAGCCTGGCGTCTGGCC






hsa-mir-125a-
GGTCCCTGAGACCCTTTAACCTGTGAGGACATCCAGGGTCACAGGTGAGGTT
118


prec
CTTGGGAGCCTGG






hsa-mir-125b-1
ACATTGTTGCGCTCCTCTCAGTCCCTGAGACCCTAACTTGTGATGTTTACCGT
119



TTAAATCCACGGGTTAGGCTCTTGGGAGCTGCGAGTCGTGCTTTTGCATCCTG




GA






hsa-mir-125b-1
TGCGCTCCTCTCAGTCCCTGAGACCCTAACTTGTGATGTTTACCGTTTAAATC
120



CACGGGTTAGGCTCTTGGGAGCTGCGAGTCGTGCT






hsa-mir-125b-2-
ACCAGACTTTTCCTAGTCCCTGAGACCCTAACTTGTGAGGTATTTTAGTAACA
121


prec
TCACAAGTCAGGCTCTTGGGACCTAGGCGGAGGGGA






hsa-mir-125b-2-
CCTAGTCCCTGAGACCCTAACTTGTGAGGTATTTTAGTAACATCACAAGTCA
122


prec
GGCTCTTGGGACCTAGGC






hsa-mir-126-prec
CGCTGGCGACGGGACATTATTACTTTTGGTACGCGCTGTGACACTTCAAACT
123




CGTACCGTGAGTAATAATGCGCCGTCCACGGCA







hsa-mir-126-prec
ACATTATTACTTTTGGTACGCGCTGTGACACTTCAAACTCGTACCGTGAGTAA
124




TAATGCGC







hsa-mir-127-prec
TGTGATCACTGTCTCCAGCCTGCTGAAGCTCAGAGGGCTCTGATTCAGAAAG
125



ATCATCGGATCCGTCTGAGCTTGGCTGGTCGGAAGTCTCATCATC






hsa-mir-127-prec
CCAGCCTGCTGAAGCTCAGAGGGCTCTGATTCAGAAAGATCATCGGATCCGT
126




CTGAGCTTGGCTGGTCGG







hsa-mir-128a-
TGAGCTGTTGGATTCGGGGCCGTAGCACTGTCTGAGAGGTTTACATTTCTCA
127


prec

CAGTGAACCGGTCTCTTTTTCAGCTGCTTC







hsa-mir-128b-
GCCCGGCAGCCACTGTGCAGTGGGAAGGGGGGCCGATACACTGTACGAGAG
128


prec
TGAGTAGCAGGTCTCACAGTGAACCGGTCTCTTTCCCTACTGTGTCACACTCC




TAATGG






hsa-mir-128-prec
GTTGGATTCGGGGCCGTAGCACTGTCTGAGAGGTTTACATTTCTCACAGTGA
129




ACCGGTCTCTTTTTCAGC







hsa-mir-129-prec
TGGATCTTTTTGCGGTCTGGGCTTGCTGTTCCTCTCAACAGTAGTCAGGAAGC
130



CCTTACCCCAAAAAGTATCTA






hsa-mir-130a-
TGCTGCTGGCCAGAGCTCTTTTCACATTGTGCTACTGTCTGCACCTGTCACTA
131


prec
GCAGTGCAATGTTAAAAGGGCATTGGCCGTGTAGTG






hsa-mir-131-1-
gccaggaggcggGGTTGGTTGTTATCTTTGGTTATCTAGCTGTATGAGTGGTGTGG
132


prec
AGTCTTCATAAAGCTAGATAACCGAAAGTAAAAATAACCCCATACACTGCGC




AG






hsa-mir-131-3-
CACGGCGCGGCAGCGGCACTGGCTAAGGGAGGCCCGTTTCTCTCTTTGGTTA
133


prec
TCTAGCTGTATGAGTGCCACAGAGCCGTCATAAAGCTAGATAACCGAAAGTA




GAAATG






hsa-mir-131-prec
GTTGTTATCTTTGGTTATCTAGCTGTATGAGTGTATTGGTCTTCATAAAGCTA
134




GATAACCGAAAGTAAAAAC







hsa-mir-132-prec
CCGCCCCCGCGTCTCCAGGGCAACCGTGGCTTTCGATTGTTACTGTGGGAAC
135



TGGAGGTAACAGTCTACAGCCATGGTCGCCCCGCAGCACGCCCACGCGC






hsa-mir-132-prec
GGGCAACCGTGGCTTTCGATTGTTACTGTGGGAACTGGAGGTAACAGTCTAC
136




AGCCATGGTCGCCC







hsa-mir-133a-1
ACAATGCTTTGCTAGAGCTGGTAAAATGGAACCAAATCGCCTCTTCAATGGA
137



TTTGGTCCCCTTCAACCAGCTGTAGCTATGCATTGA






hsa-mir-133a-2
GGGAGCCAAATGCTTTGCTAGAGCTGGTAAAATGGAACCAAATCGACTGTCC
138



AATGGATTTGGTCCCCTTCAACCAGCTGTAGCTGTGCATTGATGGCGCCG






hsa-mir-133-prec
GCTAGAGCTGGTAAAATGGAACCAAATCGCCTCTTCAATGGATTTGGTCCCC
139




TTCAACCAGCTGTAGC







hsa-mir-134-prec
CAGGGTGTGTGACTGGTTGACCAGAGGGGCATGCACTGTGTTCACCCTGTGG
140



GCCACCTAGTCACCAACCCTC






hsa-mir-134-prec
AGGGTGTGTGACTGGTTGACCAGAGGGGCATGCACTGTGTTCACCCTGTGGG
141



CCACCTAGTCACCAACCCT






hsa-mir-135-1-
AGGCCTCGCTGTTCTCTATGGCTTTTTATTCCTATGTGATTCTACTGCTCACTC
142


prec
ATATAGGGATTGGAGCCGTGGCGCACGGCGGGGACA






hsa-mir-135-2-
AGATAAATTCACTCTAGTGCTTTATGGCTTTTTATTCCTATGTGATAGTAATA
143


prec
AAGTCTCATGTAGGGATGGAAGCCATGAAATACATTGTGAAAAATCA






hsa-mir-135-prec
CTATGGCTTTTTATTCCTATGTGATTCTACTGCTCACTCATATAGGGATTGGA
144



GCCGTGG






hsa-mir-136-prec
TGAGCCCTCGGAGGACTCCATTTGTTTTGATGATGGATTCTTATGCTCCATCA
145



TCGTCTCAAATGAGTCTTCAGAGGGTTCT






hsa-mir-136-prec
GAGGACTCCATTTGTTTTGATGATGGATTCTTATGCTCCATCATCGTCTCAAA
146



TGAGTCTTC






hsa-mir-137-prec
CTTCGGTGACGGGTATTCTTGGGTGGATAATACGGATTACGTTGTTATTGCTT
147




AAGAATACGCGTAGTCGAGG







hsa-mir-138-1-
CCCTGGCATGGTGTGGTGGGGCAGCTGGTGTTGTGAATCAGGCCGTTGCCAA
148


prec
TCAGAGAACGGCTACTTCACAACACCAGGGCCACACCACACTACAGG






hsa-mir-138-2-
CGTTGCTGCAGCTGGTGTTGTGAATCAGGCCGACGAGCAGCGCATCCTCTTA
149


prec
CCCGGCTATTTCACGACACCAGGGTTGCATCA






hsa-mir-138-prec
CAGCTGGTGTTGTGAATCAGGCCGACGAGCAGCGCATCCTCTTACCCGGCTA
150



TTTCACGACACCAGGGTTG






hsa-mir-139-prec
GTGTATTCTACAGTGCACGTGTCTCCAGTGTGGCTCGGAGGCTGGAGACGCG
151



GCCCTGTTGGAGTAAC






hsa-mir-140
TGTGTCTCTCTCTGTGTCCTGCCAGTGGTTTTACCCTATGGTAGGTTACGTCA
152



TGCTGTTCTACCACAGGGTAGAACCACGGACAGGATACCGGGGCACC






hsa-mir-140as-
TCCTGCCAGTGGTTTTACCCTATGGTAGGTTACGTCATGCTGTTCTACCACAG
153


prec

GGTAGAACCACGGACAGGA







hsa-mir-140s-
CCTGCCAGTGGTTTTACCCTATGGTAGGTTACGTCATGCTGTTCTACCACAGG
154


prec

GTAGAACCACGGACAGG







hsa-mir-141-prec
CGGCCGGCCCTGGGTCCATCTTCCAGTACAGTGTTGGATGGTCTAATTGTGA
155



AGCTCCTAACACTGTCTGGTAAAGATGGCTCCCGGGTGGGTTC






hsa-mir-141-prec
GGGTCCATCTTCCAGTACAGTGTTGGATGGTCTAATTGTGAAGCTCCTAACA
156




CTGTCTGGTAAAGATGGCCC







hsa-mir-142as-
ACCCATAAAGTAGAAAGCACTACTAACAGCACTGGAGGGTGTAGTGTTTCCT
157


prec
ACTTTATGGATG






hsa-mir-142-prec
GACAGTGCAGTCACCCATAAAGTAGAAAGCACTACTAACAGCACTGGAGGG
158



TGTAGTGTTTCCTACTTTATGGATGAGTGTACTGTG






hsa-mir-142s-
ACCCATAAAGTAGAAAGCACTACTAACAGCACTGGAGGGTGTAGTGTTTCCT
159


prec
ACTTTATGGATG






hsa-mir-143-prec
GCGCAGCGCCCTGTCTCCCAGCCTGAGGTGCAGTGCTGCATCTCTGGTCAGT
160



TGGGAGTCTGAGATGAAGCACTGTAGCTCAGGAAGAGAGAAGTTGTTCTGC




AGC






hsa-mir-143-prec
CCTGAGGTGCAGTGCTGCATCTCTGGTCAGTTGGGAGTCTGAGATGAAGCAC
161




TGTAGCTCAGG







hsa-mir-144-prec
TGGGGCCCTGGCTGGGATATCATCATATACTGTAAGTTTGCGATGAGACACT
162




ACAGTATAGATGATGTACTAGTCCGGGCACCCCC







hsa-mir-144-prec
GGCTGGGATATCATCATATACTGTAAGTTTGCGATGAGACACTACAGTATAG
163




ATGATGTACTAGTC







hsa-mir-145-prec
CACCTTGTCCTCACGGTCCAGTTTTCCCAGGAATCCCTTAGATGCTAAGATGG
164



GGATTCCTGGAAATACTGTTCTTGAGGTCATGGTT






hsa-mir-145-prec
CTCACGGTCCAGTTTTCCCAGGAATCCCTTAGATGCTAAGATGGGGATTCCT
165



GGAAATACTGTTCTTGAG






hsa-mir-146-prec
CCGATGTGTATCCTCAGCTTTGAGAACTGAATTCCATGGGTTGTGTCAGTGTC
166



AGACCTCTGAAATTCAGTTCTTCAGCTGGGATATCTCTGTCATCGT






hsa-mir-146-prec
AGCTTTGAGAACTGAATTCCATGGGTTGTGTCAGTGTCAGACCTGTGAAATT
167



CAGTTCTTCAGCT






hsa-mir-147-prec
AATCTAAAGACAACATTTCTGCACACACACCAGACTATGGAAGCCAGTGTGT
168




GGAAATGCTTCTGCTAGATT







hsa-mir-148-prec
GAGGCAAAGTTCTGAGACACTCCGACTCTGAGTATGATAGAAGTCAGTGCAC
169




TACAGAACTTTGTCTC







hsa-mir-149-prec
GCCGGCGCCCGAGCTCTGGCTCCGTGTCTTCACTCCCGTGCTTGTCCGAGGA
170



GGGAGGGAGGGACGGGGGCTGTGCTGGGGCAGCTGGA






hsa-mir-149-prec
GCTCTGGCTCCGTGTCTTCACTCCCGTGCTTGTCCGAGGAGGGAGGGAGGGA
171



C






hsa-mir-150-prec
CTCCCCATGGCCCTGTCTCCCAACCCTTGTACCAGTGCTGGGCTCAGACCCTG
172



GTACAGGCCTGGGGGACAGGGACCTGGGGAC






hsa-mir-150-prec
CCCTGTCTCCCAACCCTTGTACCAGTGCTGGGCTCAGACCCTGGTACAGGCC
173



TGGGGGACAGGG






hsa-mir-151-prec
CCTGCCCTCGAGGAGCTCACAGTCTAGTATGTCTCATCCCCTACTAGACTGA
174




AGCTCCTTGAGGACAGG







hsa-mir-152-prec
TGTCCCCCCCGGCCCAGGTTCTGTGATACACTCCGACTCGGGCTCTGGAGCA
175



GTCAGTGCATGACAGAACTTGGGCCCGGAAGGACC






hsa-mir-152-prec
GGCCCAGGTTCTGTGATACACTCCGACTCGGGCTCTGGAGCAGTCAGTGCAT
176




GACAGAACTTGGGCCCCGG







hsa-mir-153-1-
CTCACAGCTGCCAGTGTCATTTTTGTGATCTGCAGCTAGTATTCTCACTCCAG
177


prec

TTGCATAGTCACAAAAGTGATCATTGGCAGGTGTGGC







hsa-mir-153-1-
tctctctctccctcACAGCTGCCAGTGTCATTGTCACAAAAGTGATCATTGGCAGGTG
178


prec
TGGCTGCTGCATG






hsa-mir-153-2-
AGCGGTGGCCAGTGTCATTTTTGTGATGTTGCAGCTAGTAATATGAGCCCAG
179


prec

TTGCATAGTCACAAAAGTGATCATTGGAAACTGTG







hsa-mir-153-2-
CAGTGTCATTTTTGTGATGTTGCAGCTAGTAATATGAGCCCAGTTGCATAGTC
180


prec

ACAAAAGTGATCATTG







hsa-mir-154-prec
GTGGTACTTGAAGATAGGTTATCCGTGTTGCCTTCGCTTTATTTGTGACGAAT
181



CATACACGGTTGACCTATTTTTCAGTACCAA






hsa-mir-154-prec
GAAGATAGGTTATCCGTGTTGCCTTCGCTTTATTTGTGACGAATCATACACGG
182



TTGACCTATTTTT






hsa-mir-155-prec
CTGTTAATGCTAATCGTGATAGGGGTTTTTGCCTCCAACTGACTCCTACATAT
183



TAGCATTAACAG






hsa-mir-16-2-
CAATGTCAGCAGTGCCTTAGCAGCACGTAAATATTGGCGTTAAGATTCTAAA
184


prec
ATTATCTCCAGTATTAACTGTGCTGCTGAAGTAAGGTTGACCATACTCTACA




GTTG






hsa-mir-181a-
AGAAGGGCTATCAGGCCAGCCTTCAGAGGACTCCAAGGAACATTCAACGCT
185


prec

GTCGGTGAGTTTGGGATTTGAAAAAACCACTGACCGTTGACTGTACCTTGGG





GTCCTTA






hsa-mir-181b-
TGAGTTTTGAGGTTGCTTCAGTGAACATTCAACGCTGTCGGTGAGTTTGGAA
186


prec
TTAAAATCAAAACCATCGACCGTTGATTGTACCCTATGGCTAACCATCATCT




ACTCCA






hsa-mir-181c-
CGGAAAATTTGCCAAGGGTTTGGGGGAACATTCAACCTGTCGGTGAGTTTGG
187


prec
GCAGCTCAGGCAAACCATCGACCGTTGAGTGGACCCTGAGGCCTGGAATTGC




CATCCT






hsa-mir-182-as-
GAGCTGCTTGCCTCCCCCCGTTTTTGGCAATGGTAGAACTCACACTGGTGAG
188


prec
GTAACAGGATCCGGTGGTTCTAGACTTGCCAACTATGGGGCGAGGACTCAGC




CGGCAC






hsa-mir-182-prec
TTTTTGGCAATGGTAGAACTCACACTGGTGAGGTAACAGGATCCGGTGGTTC
189



TAGACTTGCCAACTATGG






hsa-mir-183-prec
CCGCAGAGTGTGACTCCTGTTCTGTGTATGGCACTGGTAGAATTCACTGTGA
190



ACAGTCTCAGTCAGTGAATTACCGAAGGGCCATAAACAGAGCAGAGACAGA




TCCACGA






hsa-mir-184-prec
CCAGTCACGTCCCCTTATCACTTTTCCAGCCCAGCTTTGTGACTGTAAGTGTT
191




GGACGGAGAACTGATAAGGGTAGGTGATTGA







hsa-mir-184-prec
CCTTATCACTTTTCCAGCCCAGCTTTGTGACTGTAAGTGTTGGACGGAGAACT
192




GATAAGGGTAGG







hsa-mir-185-prec
AGGGGGCGAGGGATTGGAGAGAAAGGCAGTTCCTGATGGTCCCCTCCCCAG
193



GGGCTGGCTTTCCTCTGGTCCTTCCCTCCCA






hsa-mir-185-prec
AGGGATTGGAGAGAAAGGCAGTTCCTGATGGTCCCCTCCCCAGGGGCTGGCT
194



TTCCTCTGGTCCTT






hsa-mir-186-prec
TGCTTGTAACTTTCCAAAGAATTCTCCTTTTGGGCTTTCTGGTTTTATTTTAAG
195



CCCAAAGGTGAATTTTTTGGGAAGTTTGAGCT






hsa-mir-186-prec
ACTTTCCAAAGAATTCTCCTTTTGGGCTTTCTGGTTTTATTTTAAGCCCAAAG
196



GTGAATTTTTTGGGAAGT






hsa-mir-187-prec
GGTCGGGCTCACCATGACACAGTGTGAGACTCGGGCTACAACACAGGACCC
197



GGGGCGCTGCTCTGACCCCTCGTGTCTTGTGTTGCAGCCGGAGGGACGCAGG




TCCGCA






hsa-mir-188-prec
TGCTCCCTCTCTCACATCCCTTGCATGGTGGAGGGTGAGCTTTCTGAAAACCC
198



CTCCCACATGCAGGGTTTGCAGGATGGCGAGCC






hsa-mir-188-prec
TCTCACATCCCTTGCATGGTGGAGGGTGAGCTTTCTGAAAACCCCTCCCACA
199



TGCAGGGTTTGCAGGA






hsa-mir-189-prec
CTGTCGATTGGACCCGCCCTCCGGTGCCTACTGAGCTGATATCAGTTCTCATT
200



TTACACACTGGCTCAGTTCAGCAGGAACAGGAGTCGAGCCCTTGAGCAA






hsa-mir-189-prec
CTCCGGTGCCTACTGAGCTGATATCAGTTCTCATTTTACACACTGGCTCAGTT
201



CAGCAGGAACAGGAG






hsa-mir-190-prec
TGCAGGCCTCTGTGTGATATGTTTGATATATTAGGTTGTTATTTAATCCAACT
202



ATATATCAAACATATTCCTACAGTGTCTTGCC






hsa-mir-190-prec
CTGTGTGATATGTTTGATATATTAGGTTGTTATTTAATCCAACTATATATCAA
203



ACATATTCCTACAG






hsa-mir-191-prec
CGGCTGGACAGCGGGCAACGGAATCCCAAAAGCAGCTGTTGTCTCCAGAGC
204



ATTCCAGCTGCGCTTGGATTTCGTCCCCTGCTCTCCTGCCT






hsa-mir-191-prec
AGCGGGCAACGGAATCCCAAAAGCAGCTGTTGTCTCCAGAGCATTCCAGCTG
205



CGCTTGGATTTCGTCCCCTGCT






hsa-mir-192-2/3
CCGAGACCGAGTGCACAGGGCTCTGACCTATGAATTGACAGCCAGTGCTCTC
206



GTCTCCCCTCTGGCTGCCAATTCCATAGGTCACAGGTATGTTCGCCTCAATGC




CAG






hsa-mir-192-prec
GCCGAGACCGAGTGCACAGGGCTCTGACCTATGAATTGACAGCCAGTGCTCT
207



CGTCTCCCCTCTGGCTGCCAATTCCATAGGTCACAGGTATGTTCGCCTCAATG




CCAGC






hsa-mir-193-prec
CGAGGATGGGAGCTGAGGGCTGGGTCTTTGCGGGCGAGATGAGGGTGTCGG
208



ATCAACTGGCCTACAAAGTCCCAGTTCTCGGCCCCCG






hsa-mir-193-prec
GCTGGGTCTTTGCGGGCGAGATGAGGGTGTCGGATCAACTGGCCTACAAAGT
209




CCCAGT







hsa-mir-194-prec
ATGGTGTTATCAAGTGTAACAGCAACTCCATGTGGACTGTGTACCAATTTCC
210



AGTGGAGATGCTGTTACTTTTGATGGTTACCAA






hsa-mir-194-prec
GTGTAACAGCAACTCCATGTGGACTGTGTACCAATTTCCAGTGGAGATGCTG
211



TTACTTTTGAT






hsa-mir-195-prec
AGCTTCCCTGGCTCTAGCAGCACAGAAATATTGGCACAGGGAAGCGAGTCTG
212



CCAATATTGGCTGTGCTGCTCCAGGCAGGGTGGTG






hsa-mir-195-prec

TAGCAGCACAGAAATATTGGCACAGGGAAGCGAGTCTGCCAATATTGGCTG

213




TGCTGCT







hsa-mir-196-1-
CTAGAGCTTGAATTGGAACTGCTGAGTGAATTAGGTAGTTTCATGTTGTTGG
214


prec
GCCTGGGTTTCTGAACACAACAACATTAAACCACCCGATTCACGGCAGTTAC




TGCTCC






hsa-mir-196-1-
GTGAATTAGGTAGTTTCATGTTGTTGGGCCTGGGTTTCTGAACACAACAACA
215


prec
TTAAACCACCCGATTCAC






hsa-mir-196-2-
TGCTCGCTCAGCTGATCTGTGGCTTAGGTAGTTTCATGTTGTTGGGATTGAGT
216


prec
TTTGAACTCGGCAACAAGAAACTGCCTGAGTTACATCAGTCGGTTTTCGTCG




AGGGC






hsa-mir-196-prec
GTGAATTAGGTAGTTTCATGTTGTTGGGCCTGGGTTTCTGAACACAACAACA
217



TTAAACCACCCGATTCAC






hsa-mir-197-prec
GGCTGTGCCGGGTAGAGAGGGCAGTGGGAGGTAAGAGCTCTTCACCCTTCA
218




CCACCTTCTCCACCCAGCATGGCC







hsa-mir-198-prec
TCATTGGTCCAGAGGGGAGATAGGTTCCTGTGATTTTTCCTTCTTCTCTATAG
219



AATAAATGA






hsa-mir-199a-1-
GCCAACCCAGTGTTCAGACTACCTGTTCAGGAGGCTCTCAATGTGTACAGTA
220


prec
GTCTGCACATTGGTTAGGC






hsa-mir-199a-2-
AGGAAGCTTCTGGAGATCCTGCTCCGTCGCCCCAGTGTTCAGACTACCTGTT
221


prec
CAGGACAATGCCGTTGTACAGTAGTCTGCACATTGGTTAGACTGGGCAAGGG




AGAGCA






hsa-mir-199b-
CCAGAGGACACCTCCACTCCGTCTACCCAGTGTTTAGACTATCTGTTCAGGA
222


prec
CTCCCAAATTGTACAGTAGTCTGCACATTGGTTAGGCTGGGCTGGGTTAGAC




CCTCGG






hsa-mir-199s-
GCCAACCCAGTGTTCAGACTACCTGTTCAGGAGGCTCTCAATGTGTACAGTA
223


prec

GTCTGCACATTGGTTAGGC







hsa-mir-200a-
GCCGTGGCCATCTTACTGGGCAGCATTGGATGGAGTCAGGTCTCTAATACTG
224


prec

CCTGGTAATGATGACGGC







hsa-mir-200b-
CCAGCTCGGGCAGCCGTGGCCATCTTACTGGGCAGCATTGGATGGAGTCAGG
225


prec
TCTCTAATACTGCCTGGTAATGATGACGGCGGAGCCCTGCACG






hsa-mir-202-prec
GTTCCTTTTTCCTATGCATATACTTCTTTGAGGATCTGGCCTAAAGAGGTATA
226




GGGCATGGGAAGATGGAGC







hsa-mir-203-prec
GTGTTGGGGACTCGCGCGCTGGGTCCAGTGGTTCTTAACAGTTCAACAGTTC
227



TGTAGCGCAATTGTGAAATGTTTAGGACCACTAGACCCGGCGGGCGCGGCG




ACAGCGA






hsa-mir-204-prec
GGCTACAGTCTTTCTTCATGTGACTCGTGGACTTCCCTTTGTCATCCTATGCC
228




TGAGAATATATGAAGGAGGCTGGGAAGGCAAAGGGACGTTCAATTGTCATC





ACTGGC






hsa-mir-205-prec
AAAGATCCTCAGACAATCCATGTGCTTCTCTTGTCCTTCATTCCACCGGAGTC
229




TGTCTCATACCCAACCAGATTTCAGTGGAGTGAAGTTCAGGAGGCATGGAGC





TGACA






hsa-mir-206-prec
TGCTTCCCGAGGCCACATGCTTCTTTATATCCCCATATGGATTACTTTGCTAT
230




GGAATGTAAGGAAGTGTGTGGTTTCGGCAAGTG







hsa-mir-206-prec
AGGCCACATGCTTCTTTATATCCCCATATGGATTACTTTGCTATGGAATGTAA
231




GGAAGTGTGTGGTTTT







hsa-mir-208-prec
TGACGGGCGAGCTTTTGGCCCGGGTTATACCTGATGCTCACGTATAAGACGA
232




GCAAAAAGCTTGTTGGTCA







hsa-mir-210-prec
ACCCGGCAGTGCCTCCAGGCGCAGGGCAGCCCCTGCCCACCGCACACTGCGC
233



TGCCCCAGACCCACTGTGCGTGTGACAGCGGCTGATCTGTGCCTGGGCAGCG




CGACCC






hsa-mir-211-prec
TCACCTGGCCATGTGACTTGTGGGCTTCCCTTTGTCATCCTTCGCCTAGGGCT
234



CTGAGCAGGGCAGGGACAGCAAAGGGGTGCTCAGTTGTCACTTCCCACAGC




ACGGAG






hsa-mir-212-prec
CGGGGCACCCCGCCCGGACAGCGCGCCGGCACCTTGGCTCTAGACTGCTTAC
235



TGCCCGGGCCGCCCTCAGTAACAGTCTCCAGTCACGGCCACCGACGCCTGGC




CCCGCC






hsa-mir-213-prec
CCTGTGCAGAGATTATTTTTTAAAAGGTCACAATCAACATTCATTGCTGTCGG
236




TGGGTTGAACTGTGTGGACAAGCTCACTGAACAATGAATGCAACTGTGGCCC





CGCTT






hsa-mir-213-
GAGTTTTGAGGTTGCTTCAGTGAACATTCAACGCTGTCGGTGAGTTTGGAAT
237


prec-LIM
TAAAATCAAAACCATCGACCGTTGATTGTACCCTATGGCTAACCATCATCTA




CTCC






hsa-mir-214-prec
GGCCTGGCTGGACAGAGTTGTCATGTGTCTGCCTGTCTACACTTGCTGTGCA
238



GAACATCCGCTCACCTGTACAGCAGGCACAGACAGGCAGTCACATGACAAC




CCAGCCT






hsa-mir-215-prec
ATCATTCAGAAATGGTATACAGGAAAATGACCTATGAATTGACAGACAATAT
239



AGCTGAGTTTGTCTGTCATTTCTTTAGGCCAATATTCTGTATGACTGTGCTAC




TTCAA






hsa-mir-216-prec
GATGGCTGTGAGTTGGCTTAATCTCAGCTGGCAACTGTGAGATGTTCATACA
240



ATCCCTCACAGTGGTCTCTGGGATTATGCTAAACAGAGCAATTTCCTAGCCC




TCACGA






hsa-mir-217-prec
AGTATAATTATTACATAGTTTTTGATGTCGCAGATACTGCATCAGGAACTGA
241




TTGGATAAGAATCAGTCACCATCAGTTCCTAATGCATTGCCTTCAGCATCTA





AACAAG






hsa-mir-218-1-
GTGATAATGTAGCGAGATTTTCTGTTGTGCTTGATCTAACCATGTGGTTGCGA
242


prec
GGTATGAGTAAAACATGGTTCCGTCAAGCACCATGGAACGTCACGCAGCTTT




CTACA






hsa-mir-218-2-
GACCAGTCGCTGCGGGGCTTTCCTTTGTGCTTGATCTAACCATGTGGTGGAA
243


prec
CGATGGAAACGGAACATGGTTCTGTCAAGCACCGCGGAAAGCACCGTGCTC




TCCTGCA






hsa-mir-219-prec
CCGCCCCGGGCCGCGGCTCCTGATTGTCCAAACGCAATTCTCGAGTCTATGG
244



CTCCGGCCGAGAGTTGAGTCTGGACGTCCCGAGCCGCCGCCCCCAAACCTCG




AGCGGG






hsa-mir-220-prec
GACAGTGTGGCATTGTAGGGCTCCACACCGTATCTGACACTTTGGGCGAGGG
245



CACCATGCTGAAGGTGTTCATGATGCGGTCTGGGAACTCCTCACGGATCTTA




CTGATG






hsa-mir-221-prec
TGAACATCCAGGTCTGGGGCATGAACCTGGCATACAATGTAGATTTCTGTGT
246



TCGTTAGGCAACAGCTACATTGTCTGCTGGGTTTCAGGCTACCTGGAAACAT




GTTCTC






hsa-mir-222-prec
GCTGCTGGAAGGTGTAGGTACCCTCAATGGCTCAGTAGCCAGTGTAGATCCT
247



GTCTTTCGTAATCAGCAGCTACATCTGGCTACTGGGTCTCTGATGGCATCTTC




TAGCT






hsa-mir-223-prec
CCTGGCCTCCTGCAGTGCCACGCTCCGTGTATTTGACAAGCTGAGTTGGACA
248



CTCCATGTGGTAGAGTGTCAGTTTGTCAAATACCCCAAGTGCGGCACATGCT




TACCAG






hsa-mir-224-prec
GGGCTTTCAAGTCACTAGTGGTTCCGTTTAGTAGATGATTGTGCATTGTTTCA
249



AAATGGTGCCCTAGTGACTACAAAGCCC






hsA-mir-29b-
CTTCTGGAAGCTGGTTTCACATGGTGGCTTAGATTTTTCCATCTTTGTATCTA
250


1 = 102-prec1

GCACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTTTAGGAG







hsA-mir-29b-
CTTCAGGAAGCTGGTTTCATATGGTGGTTTAGATTTAAATAGTGATTGTCTAG
251


2 = 102prec7.1 =

CACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTCTTGGGGG




7.2







hsA-mir-29b-
CTTCAGGAAGCTGGTTTCATATGGTGGTTTAGATTTAAATAGTGATTGTCTAG
252


3 = 102prec7.1 =

CACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTCTTGGGGG




7.2







hsa-mir-
GTGAGCGACTGTAAACATCCTCGACTGGAAGCTGTGAAGCCACAGATGGGC
253


30* = mir-097-
TTTCAGTCGGATGTTTGCAGCTGCCTACT



prec-6







mir-033b
ACCAAGTTTCAGTTCATGTAAACATCCTACACTCAGCTGTAATACATGGATT
254



GGCTGGGAGGTGGATGTTTACTTCAGCTGACTTGGA






mir-101-
TGCCCTGGCTCAGTTATCACAGTGCTGATGCTGTCTATTCTAAAGGTACAGTA
255


precursor-9 = mir-

CTGTGATAACTGAAGGATGGCA




101-3







mir-108-1-small
ACACTGCAAGAACAATAAGGATTTTTAGGGGCATTATGACTGAGTCAGAAA
256



ACACAGCTGCCCCTGAAAGTCCCTCATTTTTCTTGCTGT






mir-108-2-small
ACTGCAAGAGCAATAAGGATTTTTAGGGGCATTATGATAGTGGAATGGAAA
257



CACATCTGCCCCCAAAAGTCCCTCATTTT






mir-123-prec =
CGCTGGCGACGGGACATTATTACTTTTGGTACGCGCTGTGACACTTCAAACT
258


mir-126-prec

CGTACCGTGAGTAATAATGCGCCGTCCACGGCA







mir-123-prec =
ACATTATTACTTTTGGTACGCGCTGTGACACTTCAAACTCGTACCGTGAGTAA
259


mir-126-prec
TAATGCGC






mir-129-1-prec
TGGATCTTTTTGCGGTCTGGGCTTGCTGTTCCTCTCAACAGTAGTCAGGAAGC
260



CCTTACCCCAAAAAGTATCTA






mir-129-small-
TGCCCTTCGCGAATCTTTTTGCGGTCTGGGCTTGCTGTACATAACTCAATAGC
261


2 = 129b?
CGGAAGCCCTTACCCCAAAAAGCATTTGCGGAGGGCG






mir-133b-small
GCCCCCTGCTCTGGCTGGTCAAACGGAACCAAGTCCGTCTTCCTGAGAGGTT
262



TGGTCCCCTTCAACCAGCTACAGCAGGG






mir-135-small-2
AGATAAATTCACTCTAGTGCTTTATGGCTTTTTATTCCTATGTGATAGTAATA
263



AAGTCTCATGTAGGGATGGAAGCCATGAAATACATTGTGAAAAATCA






mir-148b-small
AAGCACGATTAGCATTTGAGGTGAAGTTCTGTTATACACTCAGGCTGTGGCT
264



CTCTGAAAGTCAGTGCAT






mir-151-prec
CCTGTCCTCAAGGAGCTTCAGTCTAGTAGGGGATGAGACATACTAGACTGTG
265



AGCTCCTCGAGGGCAGG






mir-155-
CTGTTAATGCTAATCGTGATAGGGGTTTTTGCCTCCAACTGACTCCTACATAT
266


prec(BIC)
TAGCATTAACAG






mir-156 = mir-
CCTAACACTGTCTGGTAAAGATGGCTCCCGGGTGGGTTCTCTCGGCAGTAAC
267


157 = overlap
CTTCAGGGAGCCCTGAAGACCATGGAGGAC



mir-141







mir-158-small =
GCCGAGACCGAGTGCACAGGGCT AGTGCTCT
268


mir-192
CGTCTCCCCTCTGGCTGCCAATTCCATAGGTCACAGGTATGTTCGCCTCAATG




CCAGC






mir-159-1-small
TCCCGCCCCCTGTAACAGCAACTCCATGTGGAAGTGCCCACTGGTTCCAGTG
269



GGGCTGCTGTTATCTGGGGCGAGGGCCA






mir-161-small
AAAGCTGGGTTGAGAGGGCGAAAAAGGATGAGGTGACTGGTCTGGGCTACG
270



CTATGCTGCGGCGCTCGGG






mir-163-1b-
CATTGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGTCCCACCCGGGGTAAAG
271


small
AAAGGCCGAATT






mir-163-3-small
CCTAAGCCAGGGATTGTGGGTTCGAGTCCCACCTGGGGTAGAGGTGAAAGTT
272



CCTTTTACGGAATTTTTT






mir-175-
GGGCTTTCAAGTCACTAGTGGTTCCGTTTAGTAGATGATTGTGCATTGTTTCA
273


small = mir-224
AAATGGTGCCCTAGTGACTACAAAGCCC






mir-177- small
ACGCAAGTGTCCTAAGGTGAGCTCAGGGAGCACAGAAACCTCCAGTGGAAC
274



AGAAGGGCAAAAGCTCATT






mir-180- small
CATGTGTCACTTTCAGGTGGAGTTTCAAGAGTCCCTTCCTGGTTCACCGTCTC
275



CTTTGCTCTTCCACAAC






mir-187-prec
GGTCGGGCTCACCATGACACAGTGTGAGACTCGGGCTACAACACAGGACCC
276



GGGGCGCTGCTCTGACCCCTCGTGTCTTGTGTTGCAGCCGGAGGGACGCAGG




TCCGCA






mir-188-prec
TGCTCCCTCTCTCACATCCCTTGCATGGTGGAGGGTGAGCTTTCTGAAAACCC
277



CTCCCACATGCAGGGTTTGCAGGATGGCGAGCC






mir-190-prec
TGCAGGCCTCTGTGTGATATGTTTGATATATTAGGTTGTTATTTAATCCAACT
278



ATATATCAAACATATTCCTACAGTGTCTTGCC






mir-197-2
GTGCATGTGTATGTATGTGTGCATGTGCATGTGTATGTGTATGAGTGCATGC
279



GTGTGTGC






mir-197-prec
GGCTGTGCCGGGTAGAGAGGGCAGTGGGAGGTAAGAGCTCTTCACCCTTCA
280




CCACCTTCTCCACCCAGCATGGCC







mir-202-prec
GTTCCTTTTTCCTATGCATATACTTCTTTGAGGATCTGGCCTAAAGAGGTATA
281




GGGCATGGGAAGATGGAGC







mir-294-1
CAATCTTCCTTTATCATGGTATTGATTTTTCAGTGCTTCCCTTTTGTGTGAGAG
282


(chr16)
AAGATA






mir-hes1
ATGGAGCTGCTCACCCTGTGGGCCTCAAATGTGGAGGAACTATTCTGATGTC
283



CAAGTGGAAAGTGCTGCGACATTTGAGCGTCACCGGTGACGCCCATATCA






mir-hes2
GCATCCCCTCAGCCTGTGGCACTCAAACTGTGGGGGCACTTTCTGCTCTCTGG
284



TGAAAGTGCCGCCATCTTTTGAGTGTTACCGCTTGAGAAGACTCAACC






mir-hes3
CGAGGAGCTCATACTGGGATACTCAAAATGGGGGCGCTTTCCTTTTTGTCTG
285



TTACTGGGAAGTGCTTCGATTTTGGGGTGTCCCTGTTTGAGTAGGGCATC






hsa-mir-29b-1
CTTCAGGAAGCTGGTTTCATATGGTGGTTTAGATTTAAATAGTGATTGTCTAG
286



CACCATTTGAAATCAGTGTTCTTGGGGG





*An underlined sequence within a precursor sequence represents a processed miR transcript. All sequences are human.






The level of at least one miR gene product can be measured in cells of a biological sample obtained from the subject. For example, a tissue sample can be removed from a subject suspected of having breast cancer associated with by conventional biopsy techniques. In another example, a blood sample can be removed from the subject, and white blood cells can be isolated for DNA extraction by standard techniques. The blood or tissue sample is preferably obtained from the subject prior to initiation of radiotherapy, chemotherapy or other therapeutic treatment. A corresponding control tissue or blood sample can be obtained from unaffected tissues of the subject, from a normal human individual or population of normal individuals, or from cultured cells corresponding to the majority of cells in the subject's sample. The control tissue or blood sample is then processed along with the sample from the subject, so that the levels of miR gene product produced from a given miR gene in cells from the subject's sample can be compared to the corresponding miR gene product levels from cells of the control sample.


An alteration (i.e., an increase or decrease) in the level of a miR gene product in the sample obtained from the subject, relative to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample, is indicative of the presence of breast cancer in the subject. In one embodiment, the level of the at least one miR gene product in the test sample is greater than the level of the corresponding miR gene product in the control sample (i.e., expression of the miR gene product is “up-regulated”). As used herein, expression of a miR gene product is “up-regulated” when the amount of miR gene product in a cell or tissue sample from a subject is greater than the amount the same gene product in a control cell or tissue sample. In another embodiment, the level of the at least one miR gene product in the test sample is less than the level of the corresponding miR gene product in the control sample (i.e., expression of the miR gene product is “down-regulated”). As used herein, expression of a miR gene is “down-regulated” when the amount of miR gene product produced from that gene in a cell or tissue sample from a subject is less than the amount produced from the same gene in a control cell or tissue sample. The relative miR gene expression in the control and normal samples can be determined with respect to one or more RNA expression standards. The standards can comprise, for example, a zero miR gene expression level, the miR gene expression level in a standard cell line, or the average level of miR gene expression previously obtained for a population of normal human controls.


The level of a miR gene product in a sample can be measured using any technique that is suitable for detecting RNA expression levels in a biological sample. Suitable techniques for determining RNA expression levels in cells from a biological sample (for example, Northern blot analysis, RT-PCR, in situ hybridization) are well known to those of skill in the art. In a particular embodiment, the level of at least one miR gene product is detected using Northern blot analysis. For example, total cellular RNA can be purified from cells by homogenization in the presence of nucleic acid extraction buffer, followed by centrifugation. Nucleic acids are precipitated, and DNA is removed by treatment with DNase and precipitation. The RNA molecules are then separated by gel electrophoresis on agarose gels according to standard techniques, and transferred to nitrocellulose filters. The RNA is then immobilized on the filters by heating. Detection and quantification of specific RNA is accomplished using appropriately labeled DNA or RNA probes complementary to the RNA in question. See, for example, Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, J. Sambrook et al., eds., 2nd edition, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1989, Chapter 7, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.


Suitable probes for Northern blot hybridization of a given miR gene product can be produced from the nucleic acid sequences provided in Table 1. Methods for preparation of labeled DNA and RNA probes, and the conditions for hybridization thereof to target nucleotide sequences, are described in Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, J. Sambrook et al., eds., 2nd edition, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1989, Chapters 10 and 11, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


For example, the nucleic acid probe can be labeled with, for example, a radionuclide, such as 3H, 32P, 33P, 14C, or 35S; a heavy metal; or a ligand capable of functioning as a specific binding pair member for a labeled ligand (for example, biotin, avidin or an antibody), a fluorescent molecule, a chemiluminescent molecule, an enzyme or the like.


Probes can be labeled to high specific activity by either the nick translation method of Rigby et al. (1977), J. Mol. Biol. 113:237-251 or by the random priming method of Fienberg et al. (1983), Anal. Biochem. 132:6-13, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. The latter is the method of choice for synthesizing 32P-labeled probes of high specific activity from single-stranded DNA or from RNA templates. For example, by replacing preexisting nucleotides with highly radioactive nucleotides according to the nick translation method, it is possible to prepare 32P-labeled nucleic acid probes with a specific activity well in excess of 108 cpm/microgram. Autoradiographic detection of hybridization can then be performed by exposing hybridized filters to photographic film. Densitometric scanning of the photographic films exposed by the hybridized filters provides an accurate measurement of miR gene transcript levels. Using another approach, miR gene transcript levels can be quantified by computerized imaging systems, such the Molecular Dynamics 400-B 2D Phosphorimager available from Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, N.J.


Where radionuclide labeling of DNA or RNA probes is not practical, the random-primer method can be used to incorporate an analogue, for example, the dTTP analogue 5-(N—(N-biotinyl-epsilon-aminocaproyl)-3-aminoallyl)deoxyuridine triphosphate, into the probe molecule. The biotinylated probe oligonucleotide can be detected by reaction with biotin-binding proteins, such as avidin, streptavidin, and antibodies (for example, anti-biotin antibodies) coupled to fluorescent dyes or enzymes that produce color reactions.


In addition to Northern and other RNA hybridization techniques, determining the levels of RNA transcripts can be accomplished using the technique of in situ hybridization. This technique requires fewer cells than the Northern blotting technique, and involves depositing whole cells onto a microscope cover slip and probing the nucleic acid content of the cell with a solution containing radioactive or otherwise labeled nucleic acid (for example, cDNA or RNA) probes. This technique is particularly well-suited for analyzing tissue biopsy samples from subjects. The practice of the in situ hybridization technique is described in more detail in U.S. Pat. No. 5,427,916, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. Suitable probes for in situ hybridization of a given miR gene product can be produced from the nucleic acid sequences provided in Table 1, as described above.


The relative number of miR gene transcripts in cells can also be determined by reverse transcription of miR gene transcripts, followed by amplification of the reverse-transcribed transcripts by polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The levels of miR gene transcripts can be quantified in comparison with an internal standard, for example, the level of mRNA from a “housekeeping” gene present in the same sample. A suitable “housekeeping” gene for use as an internal standard includes, for example, myosin or glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PDH). The methods for quantitative RT-PCR and variations thereof are within the skill in the art.


In some instances, it may be desirable to simultaneously determine the expression level of a plurality of different miR gene products in a sample. In other instances, it may be desirable to determine the expression level of the transcripts of all known miR genes correlated with a cancer. Assessing cancer-specific expression levels for hundreds of miR genes is time consuming and requires a large amount of total RNA (at least 20 μg for each Northern blot) and autoradiographic techniques that require radioactive isotopes.


To overcome these limitations, an oligolibrary, in microchip format (i.e., a microarray), may be constructed containing a set of probe oligodeoxynucleotides that are specific for a set of miR genes. Using such a microarray, the expression level of multiple microRNAs in a biological sample can be determined by reverse transcribing the RNAs to generate a set of target oligodeoxynucleotides, and hybridizing them to probe oligodeoxynucleotides on the microarray to generate a hybridization, or expression, profile. The hybridization profile of the test sample can then be compared to that of a control sample to determine which microRNAs have an altered expression level in breast cancer cells. As used herein, “probe oligonucleotide” or “probe oligodeoxynucleotide” refers to an oligonucleotide that is capable of hybridizing to a target oligonucleotide. “Target oligonucleotide” or “target oligodeoxynucleotide” refers to a molecule to be detected (for example, via hybridization). By “miR-specific probe oligonucleotide” or “probe oligonucleotide specific for a miR” is meant a probe oligonucleotide that has a sequence selected to hybridize to a specific miR gene product, or to a reverse transcript of the specific miR gene product.


An “expression profile” or “hybridization profile” of a particular sample is essentially a fingerprint of the state of the sample; while two states may have any particular gene similarly expressed, the evaluation of a number of genes simultaneously allows the generation of a gene expression profile that is unique to the state of the cell. That is, normal tissue may be distinguished from breast cancer tissue, and within breast cancer tissue, different prognosis states (good or poor long term survival prospects, for example) may be determined. By comparing expression profiles of breast cancer tissue in different states, information regarding which genes are important (including both up- and down-regulation of genes) in each of these states is obtained. The identification of sequences that are differentially expressed in breast cancer tissue or normal breast tissue, as well as differential expression resulting in different prognostic outcomes, allows the use of this information in a number of ways. For example, a particular treatment regime may be evaluated (for example, to determine whether a chemotherapeutic drug act to improve the long-term prognosis in a particular patient). Similarly, diagnosis may be done or confirmed by comparing patient samples with the known expression profiles. Furthermore, these gene expression profiles (or individual genes) allow screening of drug candidates that suppress the breast cancer expression profile or convert a poor prognosis profile to a better prognosis profile.


Accordingly, the invention provides methods of diagnosing whether a subject has, or is at risk for developing, breast cancer, comprising reverse transcribing RNA from a test sample obtained from the subject to provide a set of target oligo-deoxynucleotides, hybridizing the target oligo-deoxynucleotides to a microarray comprising miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides to provide a hybridization profile for the test sample, and comparing the test sample hybridization profile to a hybridization profile generated from a control sample, wherein an alteration in the signal of at least one miRNA is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, breast cancer. In one embodiment, the microarray comprises miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides for a substantial portion of the human miRNome. In a particular embodiment, the microarray comprises miRNA-specific probe oligo-nucleotides for one or more miRNAs selected from the group consisting of miR-125b, miR-145, miR-21, miR-155, miR-10b, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, miR-213, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-101-1, miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-143, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210 and combinations thereof. In a further embodiment, the at least one miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-125b, miR-145, miR-21, miR-155, miR-10b and combinations thereof.


The microarray can be prepared from gene-specific oligonucleotide probes generated from known miRNA sequences. The array may contain two different oligonucleotide probes for each miRNA, one containing the active, mature sequence and the other being specific for the precursor of the miRNA. The array may also contain controls, such as one or more mouse sequences differing from human orthologs by only a few bases, which can serve as controls for hybridization stringency conditions. tRNAs from both species may also be printed on the microchip, providing an internal, relatively stable, positive control for specific hybridization. One or more appropriate controls for non-specific hybridization may also be included on the microchip. For this purpose, sequences are selected based upon the absence of any homology with any known miRNAs.


The microarray may be fabricated using techniques known in the art. For example, probe oligonucleotides of an appropriate length, for example, 40 nucleotides, are 5′-amine modified at position C6 and printed using commercially available microarray systems, for example, the GeneMachine OmniGrid™ 100 Microarrayer and Amersham CodeLink™ activated slides. Labeled cDNA oligomer corresponding to the target RNAs is prepared by reverse transcribing the target RNA with labeled primer. Following first strand synthesis, the RNA/DNA hybrids are denatured to degrade the RNA templates. The labeled target cDNAs thus prepared are then hybridized to the microarray chip under hybridizing conditions, for example, 6×SSPE/30% formamide at 25° C. for 18 hours, followed by washing in 0.75×TNT at 37° C. for 40 minutes. At positions on the array where the immobilized probe DNA recognizes a complementary target cDNA in the sample, hybridization occurs. The labeled target cDNA marks the exact position on the array where binding occurs, allowing automatic detection and quantification. The output consists of a list of hybridization events, indicating the relative abundance of specific cDNA sequences, and therefore the relative abundance of the corresponding complementary miRs, in the patient sample. According to one embodiment, the labeled cDNA oligomer is a biotin-labeled cDNA, prepared from a biotin-labeled primer. The microarray is then processed by direct detection of the biotin-containing transcripts using, for example, Streptavidin-Alexa647 conjugate, and scanned utilizing conventional scanning methods. Image intensities of each spot on the array are proportional to the abundance of the corresponding miR in the patient sample.


The use of the array has several advantages for miRNA expression detection. First, the global expression of several hundred genes can be identified in the same sample at one time point. Second, through careful design of the oligonucleotide probes, expression of both mature and precursor molecules can be identified. Third, in comparison with Northern blot analysis, the chip requires a small amount of RNA, and provides reproducible results using 2.5 μg of total RNA. The relatively limited number of miRNAs (a few hundred per species) allows the construction of a common microarray for several species, with distinct oligonucleotide probes for each. Such a tool would allow for analysis of trans-species expression for each known miR under various conditions.


In addition to use for quantitative expression level assays of specific miRs, a microchip containing miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides corresponding to a substantial portion of the miRNome, preferably the entire miRNome, may be employed to carry out miR gene expression profiling, for analysis of miR expression patterns. Distinct miR signatures can be associated with established disease markers, or directly with a disease state.


According to the expression profiling methods described herein, total RNA from a sample from a subject suspected of having a cancer (such as breast cancer) is quantitatively reverse transcribed to provide a set of labeled target oligodeoxynucleotides complementary to the RNA in the sample. The target oligodeoxynucleotides are then hybridized to a microarray comprising miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides to provide a hybridization profile for the sample. The result is a hybridization profile for the sample representing the expression pattern of miRNA in the sample. The hybridization profile comprises the signal from the binding of the target oligodeoxynucleotides from the sample to the miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides in the microarray. The profile may be recorded as the presence or absence of binding (signal vs. zero signal). More preferably, the profile recorded includes the intensity of the signal from each hybridization. The profile is compared to the hybridization profile generated from a normal, noncancerous, control sample. An alteration in the signal is indicative of the presence of the cancer in the subject.


Other techniques for measuring miR gene expression are also within the skill in the art, and include various techniques for measuring rates of RNA transcription and degradation.


The invention also provides methods of diagnosing a breast cancer associated with one or more prognostic markers, comprising measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in a breast cancer test sample from a subject and comparing the level of the at least one miR gene product in the breast cancer test sample to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample. An alteration (for example, an increase, a decrease) in the signal of at least one miRNA in the test sample relative to the control sample is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, breast cancer associated with the one or more prognostic markers.


The breast cancer can be associated with one or more prognostic markers or features, including, a marker associated with an adverse (negative) prognosis, or a marker associated with a good (positive) prognosis. In certain embodiments, the breast cancer that is diagnosed using the methods described herein is associated with one or more adverse prognostic features selected from the group consisting of estrogen receptor expression, progesterone receptor expression, positive lymph node metastasis, high proliferative index, detectable p53 expression, advanced tumor stage, and high vascular invasion. Particular microRNAs whose expression is altered in breast cancer cells associated with each of these prognostic markers are described herein (see, for example, Example 3 and FIG. 4). In one embodiment, the level of the at least one miR gene product is measured by reverse transcribing RNA from a test sample obtained from the subject to provide a set of target oligodeoxynucleotides, hybridizing the target oligodeoxynucleotides to a microarray that comprises miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides to provide a hybridization profile for the test sample, and comparing the test sample hybridization profile to a hybridization profile generated from a control sample.


Without wishing to be bound by any one theory, it is believed that alterations in the level of one or more miR gene products in cells can result in the deregulation of one or more intended targets for these miRs, which can lead to the formation of breast cancer. Therefore, altering the level of the miR gene product (for example, by decreasing the level of a miR that is up-regulated in breast cancer cells and/or by increasing the level of a miR that is down-regulated in cancer cells) may successfully treat the breast cancer. Examples of putative gene targets for miRNAs that are deregulated in breast cancer tissues are described herein (see, for example, Example 2 and Table 4).


Accordingly, the present invention encompasses methods of treating breast cancer in a subject, wherein at least one miR gene product is de-regulated (for example, down-regulated or up-regulated) in the cancer cells of the subject. When the at least one isolated miR gene product is down-regulated in the breast cancer cells, the method comprises administering an effective amount of the at least one isolated miR gene product, provided that the miR gene is not miR15 or miR16, such that proliferation of cancer cells in the subject is inhibited. When the at least one isolated miR gene product is up-regulated in the cancer cells, the method comprises administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one compound for inhibiting expression of the at least one miR gene, referred to herein as miR gene expression inhibition compounds, such that proliferation of breast cancer cells is inhibited.


The terms “treat”, “treating” and “treatment”, as used herein, refer to ameliorating symptoms associated with a disease or condition, for example, breast cancer, including preventing or delaying the onset of the disease symptoms, and/or lessening the severity or frequency of symptoms of the disease or condition. The terms “subject” and “individual” are defined herein to include animals, such as mammals, including but not limited to, primates, cows, sheep, goats, horses, dogs, cats, rabbits, guinea pigs, rats, mice or other bovine, ovine, equine, canine, feline, rodent, or murine species. In a preferred embodiment, the animal is a human.


As used herein, an “effective amount” of an isolated miR gene product is an amount sufficient to inhibit proliferation of a cancer cell in a subject suffering from breast cancer. One skilled in the art can readily determine an effective amount of an miR gene product to be administered to a given subject, by taking into account factors, such as the size and weight of the subject; the extent of disease penetration; the age, health and sex of the subject; the route of administration; and whether the administration is regional or systemic.


For example, an effective amount of an isolated miR gene product can be based on the approximate weight of a tumor mass to be treated. The approximate weight of a tumor mass can be determined by calculating the approximate volume of the mass, wherein one cubic centimeter of volume is roughly equivalent to one gram. An effective amount of the isolated miR gene product based on the weight of a tumor mass can be in the range of about 10-500 micrograms/gram of tumor mass. In certain embodiments, the tumor mass can be at least about 10 micrograms/gram of tumor mass, at least about 60 micrograms/gram of tumor mass or at least about 100 micrograms/gram of tumor mass.


An effective amount of an isolated miR gene product can also be based on the approximate or estimated body weight of a subject to be treated. Preferably, such effective amounts are administered parenterally or enterally, as described herein. For example, an effective amount of the isolated miR gene product is administered to a subject can range from about 5-3000 micrograms/kg of body weight, from about 700-1000 micrograms/kg of body weight, or greater than about 1000 micrograms/kg of body weight.


One skilled in the art can also readily determine an appropriate dosage regimen for the administration of an isolated miR gene product to a given subject. For example, a miR gene product can be administered to the subject once (for example, as a single injection or deposition). Alternatively, a miR gene product can be administered once or twice daily to a subject for a period of from about three to about twenty-eight days, more particularly from about seven to about ten days. In a particular dosage regimen, a miR gene product is administered once a day for seven days. Where a dosage regimen comprises multiple administrations, it is understood that the effective amount of the miR gene product administered to the subject can comprise the total amount of gene product administered over the entire dosage regimen.


As used herein, an “isolated” miR gene product is one which is synthesized, or altered or removed from the natural state through human intervention. For example, a synthetic miR gene product, or a miR gene product partially or completely separated from the coexisting materials of its natural state, is considered to be “isolated.” An isolated miR gene product can exist in substantially-purified form, or can exist in a cell into which the miR gene product has been delivered. Thus, a miR gene product which is deliberately delivered to, or expressed in, a cell is considered an “isolated” miR gene product. A miR gene product produced inside a cell from a miR precursor molecule is also considered to be “isolated” molecule.


Isolated miR gene products can be obtained using a number of standard techniques. For example, the miR gene products can be chemically synthesized or recombinantly produced using methods known in the art. In one embodiment, miR gene products are chemically synthesized using appropriately protected ribonucleoside phosphoramidites and a conventional DNA/RNA synthesizer. Commercial suppliers of synthetic RNA molecules or synthesis reagents include, for example, Proligo (Hamburg, Germany), Dharmacon Research (Lafayette, Colo., U.S.A.), Pierce Chemical (part of Perbio Science, Rockford, Ill., U.S.A.), Glen Research (Sterling, Va., U.S.A.), ChemGenes (Ashland, Mass., U.S.A.) and Cruachem (Glasgow, UK).


Alternatively, the miR gene products can be expressed from recombinant circular or linear DNA plasmids using any suitable promoter. Suitable promoters for expressing RNA from a plasmid include, for example, the U6 or H1 RNA pol III promoter sequences, or the cytomegalovirus promoters. Selection of other suitable promoters is within the skill in the art. The recombinant plasmids of the invention can also comprise inducible or regulatable promoters for expression of the miR gene products in cancer cells.


The miR gene products that are expressed from recombinant plasmids can be isolated from cultured cell expression systems by standard techniques. The miR gene products which are expressed from recombinant plasmids can also be delivered to, and expressed directly in, the cancer cells. The use of recombinant plasmids to deliver the miR gene products to cancer cells is discussed in more detail below.


The miR gene products can be expressed from a separate recombinant plasmid, or they can be expressed from the same recombinant plasmid. In one embodiment, the miR gene products are expressed as RNA precursor molecules from a single plasmid, and the precursor molecules are processed into the functional miR gene product by a suitable processing system, including, but not limited to, processing systems extant within a cancer cell. Other suitable processing systems include, for example, the in vitro Drosophila cell lysate system (for example, as described in U.S. Published Patent Application No. 2002/0086356 to Tuschl et al., the entire disclosure of which are incorporated herein by reference) and the E. coli RNAse III system (for example, as described in U.S. Published Patent Application No. 2004/0014113 to Yang et al., the entire disclosure of which are incorporated herein by reference).


Selection of plasmids suitable for expressing the miR gene products, methods for inserting nucleic acid sequences into the plasmid to express the gene products, and methods of delivering the recombinant plasmid to the cells of interest are within the skill in the art. See, for example, Zeng et al. (2002), Molecular Cell 9:1327-1333; Tuschl (2002), Nat. Biotechnol, 20:446-448; Brummelkamp et al. (2002), Science 296:550-553; Miyagishi et al. (2002), Nat. Biotechnol. 20:497-500; Paddison et al. (2002), Genes Dev. 16:948-958; Lee et al. (2002), Nat. Biotechnol. 20:500-505; and Paul et al. (2002), Nat. Biotechnol. 20:505-508, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


In one embodiment, a plasmid expressing the miR gene products comprises a sequence encoding a miR precursor RNA under the control of the CMV intermediate-early promoter. As used herein, “under the control” of a promoter means that the nucleic acid sequences encoding the miR gene product are located 3′ of the promoter, so that the promoter can initiate transcription of the miR gene product coding sequences.


The miR gene products can also be expressed from recombinant viral vectors. It is contemplated that the miR gene products can be expressed from two separate recombinant viral vectors, or from the same viral vector. The RNA expressed from the recombinant viral vectors can either be isolated from cultured cell expression systems by standard techniques, or can be expressed directly in cancer cells. The use of recombinant viral vectors to deliver the miR gene products to cancer cells is discussed in more detail below.


The recombinant viral vectors of the invention comprise sequences encoding the miR gene products and any suitable promoter for expressing the RNA sequences. Suitable promoters include, for example, the U6 or H1 RNA pol III promoter sequences, or the cytomegalovirus promoters. Selection of other suitable promoters is within the skill in the art. The recombinant viral vectors of the invention can also comprise inducible or regulatable promoters for expression of the miR gene products in a cancer cell.


Any viral vector capable of accepting the coding sequences for the miR gene products can be used; for example, vectors derived from adenovirus (AV); adeno-associated virus (AAV); retroviruses (for example, lentiviruses (LV), Rhabdoviruses, murine leukemia virus); herpes virus, and the like. The tropism of the viral vectors can be modified by pseudotyping the vectors with envelope proteins or other surface antigens from other viruses, or by substituting different viral capsid proteins, as appropriate.


For example, lentiviral vectors of the invention can be pseudotyped with surface proteins from vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), rabies, Ebola, Mokola, and the like. AAV vectors of the invention can be made to target different cells by engineering the vectors to express different capsid protein serotypes. For example, an AAV vector expressing a serotype 2 capsid on a serotype 2 genome is called AAV 2/2. This serotype 2 capsid gene in the AAV 2/2 vector can be replaced by a serotype 5 capsid gene to produce an AAV 2/5 vector. Techniques for constructing AAV vectors that express different capsid protein serotypes are within the skill in the art; see, for example, Rabinowitz, J. E., et al. (2002), J. Virol. 76:791-801, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.


Selection of recombinant viral vectors suitable for use in the invention, methods for inserting nucleic acid sequences for expressing RNA into the vector, methods of delivering the viral vector to the cells of interest, and recovery of the expressed RNA products are within the skill in the art. See, for example, Dornburg (1995), Gene Therap. 2:301-310; Eglitis (1988), Biotechniques 6:608-614; Miller (1990), Hum. Gene Therap. 1:5-14; and Anderson (1998), Nature 392:25-30, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


Particularly suitable viral vectors are those derived from AV and AAV. A suitable AV vector for expressing the miR gene products, a method for constructing the recombinant AV vector, and a method for delivering the vector into target cells, are described in Xia et al. (2002), Nat. Biotech. 20:1006-1010, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. Suitable AAV vectors for expressing the miR gene products, methods for constructing the recombinant AAV vector, and methods for delivering the vectors into target cells are described in Samulski et al. (1987), J. Virol. 61:3096-3101; Fisher et al. (1996), J. Virol., 70:520-532; Samulski et al. (1989), J. Virol. 63:3822-3826; U.S. Pat. No. 5,252,479; U.S. Pat. No. 5,139,941; International Patent Application No. WO 94/13788; and International Patent Application No. WO 93/24641, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. In one embodiment, the miR gene products are expressed from a single recombinant AAV vector comprising the CMV intermediate early promoter.


In a certain embodiment, a recombinant AAV viral vector of the invention comprises a nucleic acid sequence encoding a miR precursor RNA in operable connection with a polyT termination sequence under the control of a human U6 RNA promoter. As used herein, “in operable connection with a polyT termination sequence” means that the nucleic acid sequences encoding the sense or antisense strands are immediately adjacent to the polyT termination signal in the 5′ direction. During transcription of the miR sequences from the vector, the polyT termination signals act to terminate transcription.


In other embodiments of the treatment methods of the invention, an effective amount of at least one compound which inhibits miR expression can also be administered to the subject. As used herein, “inhibiting miR expression” means that the production of the active, mature form of miR gene product after treatment is less than the amount produced prior to treatment. One skilled in the art can readily determine whether miR expression has been inhibited in a cancer cell, using for example the techniques for determining miR transcript level discussed above for the diagnostic method Inhibition can occur at the level of gene expression (such as, by inhibiting transcription of a miR gene encoding the miR gene product) or at the level of processing (such as, by inhibiting processing of a miR precursor into a mature, active miR).


As used herein, an “effective amount” of a compound that inhibits miR expression is an amount sufficient to inhibit proliferation of a cancer cell in a subject suffering from a cancer associated with a cancer-associated chromosomal feature. One skilled in the art can readily determine an effective amount of an miR expression-inhibiting compound to be administered to a given subject, by taking into account factors, such as the size and weight of the subject; the extent of disease penetration; the age, health and sex of the subject; the route of administration; and whether the administration is regional or systemic.


For example, an effective amount of the expression-inhibiting compound can be based on the approximate weight of a tumor mass to be treated. The approximate weight of a tumor mass can be determined by calculating the approximate volume of the mass, wherein one cubic centimeter of volume is roughly equivalent to one gram. An effective amount based on the weight of a tumor mass can be between about 10-500 micrograms/gram of tumor mass, at least about 10 micrograms/gram of tumor mass, at least about 60 micrograms/gram of tumor mass, and at least about 100 micrograms/gram of tumor mass.


An effective amount of a compound that inhibits miR expression can also be based on the approximate or estimated body weight of a subject to be treated. Such effective amounts are administered parenterally or enterally, among others, as described herein. For example, an effective amount of the expression-inhibiting compound administered to a subject can range from about 5-3000 micrograms/kg of body weight, from about 700-1000 micrograms/kg of body weight, or it can be greater than about 1000 micrograms/kg of body weight.


One skilled in the art can also readily determine an appropriate dosage regimen for administering a compound that inhibits miR expression to a given subject. For example, an expression-inhibiting compound can be administered to the subject once (for example, as a single injection or deposition). Alternatively, an expression-inhibiting compound can be administered once or twice daily to a subject for a period of from about three to about twenty-eight days, more preferably from about seven to about ten days. In a particular dosage regimen, an expression-inhibiting compound is administered once a day for seven days. Where a dosage regimen comprises multiple administrations, it is understood that the effective amount of the expression-inhibiting compound administered to the subject can comprise the total amount of compound administered over the entire dosage regimen.


Suitable compounds for inhibiting miR gene expression include double-stranded RNA (such as short- or small-interfering RNA or “siRNA”), antisense nucleic acids, and enzymatic RNA molecules, such as ribozymes. Each of these compounds can be targeted to a given miR gene product and destroy or induce the destruction of the target miR gene product.


For example, expression of a given miR gene can be inhibited by inducing RNA interference of the miR gene with an isolated double-stranded RNA (“dsRNA”) molecule which has at least 90%, for example at least 95%, at least 98%, at least 99% or 100%, sequence homology with at least a portion of the miR gene product. In a particular embodiment, the dsRNA molecule is a “short or small interfering RNA” or “siRNA.”


siRNA useful in the present methods comprise short double-stranded RNA from about 17 nucleotides to about 29 nucleotides in length, preferably from about 19 to about 25 nucleotides in length. The siRNA comprise a sense RNA strand and a complementary antisense RNA strand annealed together by standard Watson-Crick base-pairing interactions (hereinafter “base-paired”). The sense strand comprises a nucleic acid sequence which is substantially identical to a nucleic acid sequence contained within the target miR gene product.


As used herein, a nucleic acid sequence in a siRNA which is “substantially identical” to a target sequence contained within the target mRNA is a nucleic acid sequence that is identical to the target sequence, or that differs from the target sequence by one or two nucleotides. The sense and antisense strands of the siRNA can comprise two complementary, single-stranded RNA molecules, or can comprise a single molecule in which two complementary portions are base-paired and are covalently linked by a single-stranded “hairpin” area.


The siRNA can also be altered RNA that differs from naturally-occurring RNA by the addition, deletion, substitution and/or alteration of one or more nucleotides. Such alterations can include addition of non-nucleotide material, such as to the end(s) of the siRNA or to one or more internal nucleotides of the siRNA, or modifications that make the siRNA resistant to nuclease digestion, or the substitution of one or more nucleotides in the siRNA with deoxyribonucleotides.


One or both strands of the siRNA can also comprise a 3′ overhang. As used herein, a “3′ overhang” refers to at least one unpaired nucleotide extending from the 3′-end of a duplexed RNA strand. Thus, in certain embodiments, the siRNA comprises at least one 3′ overhang of from 1 to about 6 nucleotides (which includes ribonucleotides or deoxyribonucleotides) in length, from 1 to about 5 nucleotides in length, from 1 to about 4 nucleotides in length, or from about 2 to about 4 nucleotides in length. In a particular embodiment, the 3′ overhang is present on both strands of the siRNA, and is 2 nucleotides in length. For example, each strand of the siRNA can comprise 3′ overhangs of dithymidylic acid (“TT”) or diuridylic acid (“uu”).


The siRNA can be produced chemically or biologically, or can be expressed from a recombinant plasmid or viral vector, as described above for the isolated miR gene products. Exemplary methods for producing and testing dsRNA or siRNA molecules are described in U.S. Published Patent Application No. 2002/0173478 to Gewirtz and in U.S. Pat. No. 7,148,342 to Reich et al., the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


Expression of a given miR gene can also be inhibited by an antisense nucleic acid. As used herein, an “antisense nucleic acid” refers to a nucleic acid molecule that binds to target RNA by means of RNA-RNA or RNA-DNA or RNA-peptide nucleic acid interactions, which alters the activity of the target RNA. Antisense nucleic acids suitable for use in the present methods are single-stranded nucleic acids (for example, RNA, DNA, RNA-DNA chimeras, PNA) that generally comprise a nucleic acid sequence complementary to a contiguous nucleic acid sequence in an miR gene product. The antisense nucleic acid can comprise a nucleic acid sequence that is 50-100% complementary, 75-100% complementary, or 95-100% complementary to a contiguous nucleic acid sequence in an miR gene product. Nucleic acid sequences for the miR gene products are provided in Table 1. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, it is believed that the antisense nucleic acids activate RNase H or another cellular nuclease that digests the miR gene product/antisense nucleic acid duplex.


Antisense nucleic acids can also contain modifications to the nucleic acid backbone or to the sugar and base moieties (or their equivalent) to enhance target specificity, nuclease resistance, delivery or other properties related to efficacy of the molecule. Such modifications include cholesterol moieties, duplex intercalators, such as acridine, or one or more nuclease-resistant groups.


Antisense nucleic acids can be produced chemically or biologically, or can be expressed from a recombinant plasmid or viral vector, as described above for the isolated miR gene products. Exemplary methods for producing and testing are within the skill in the art; see, for example, Stein and Cheng (1993), Science 261:1004 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,849,902 to Woolf et al., the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


Expression of a given miR gene can also be inhibited by an enzymatic nucleic acid. As used herein, an “enzymatic nucleic acid” refers to a nucleic acid comprising a substrate binding region that has complementarity to a contiguous nucleic acid sequence of an miR gene product, and which is able to specifically cleave the miR gene product. The enzymatic nucleic acid substrate binding region can be, for example, 50-100% complementary, 75-100% complementary, or 95-100% complementary to a contiguous nucleic acid sequence in a miR gene product. The enzymatic nucleic acids can also comprise modifications at the base, sugar, and/or phosphate groups. An exemplary enzymatic nucleic acid for use in the present methods is a ribozyme.


The enzymatic nucleic acids can be produced chemically or biologically, or can be expressed from a recombinant plasmid or viral vector, as described above for the isolated miR gene products. Exemplary methods for producing and testing dsRNA or siRNA molecules are described in Werner and Uhlenbeck (1995), Nucl. Acids Res. 23:2092-96; Hammann et al. (1999), Antisense and Nucleic Acid Drug Dev. 9:25-31; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,987,071 to Cech et al, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


Administration of at least one miR gene product, or at least one compound for inhibiting miR expression, will inhibit the proliferation of cancer cells in a subject who has a cancer associated with a cancer-associated chromosomal feature. As used herein, to “inhibit the proliferation of a cancer cell” means to kill the cell, or permanently or temporarily arrest or slow the growth of the cell. Inhibition of cancer cell proliferation can be inferred if the number of such cells in the subject remains constant or decreases after administration of the miR gene products or miR gene expression-inhibiting compounds. An inhibition of cancer cell proliferation can also be inferred if the absolute number of such cells increases, but the rate of tumor growth decreases.


The number of cancer cells in a subject's body can be determined by direct measurement, or by estimation from the size of primary or metastatic tumor masses. For example, the number of cancer cells in a subject can be measured by immunohistological methods, flow cytometry, or other techniques designed to detect characteristic surface markers of cancer cells.


The size of a tumor mass can be ascertained by direct visual observation, or by diagnostic imaging methods, such as X-ray, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound, and scintigraphy. Diagnostic imaging methods used to ascertain size of the tumor mass can be employed with or without contrast agents, as is known in the art. The size of a tumor mass can also be ascertained by physical means, such as palpation of the tissue mass or measurement of the tissue mass with a measuring instrument, such as a caliper.


The miR gene products or miR gene expression-inhibiting compounds can be administered to a subject by any means suitable for delivering these compounds to cancer cells of the subject. For example, the miR gene products or miR expression inhibiting compounds can be administered by methods suitable to transfect cells of the subject with these compounds, or with nucleic acids comprising sequences encoding these compounds. In one embodiment, the cells are transfected with a plasmid or viral vector comprising sequences encoding at least one miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibiting compound.


Transfection methods for eukaryotic cells are well known in the art, and include, for example, direct injection of the nucleic acid into the nucleus or pronucleus of a cell; electroporation; liposome transfer or transfer mediated by lipophilic materials; receptor-mediated nucleic acid delivery, bioballistic or particle acceleration; calcium phosphate precipitation, and transfection mediated by viral vectors.


For example, cells can be transfected with a liposomal transfer compound, such as, DOTAP (N-[1-(2,3-dioleoyloxy)propyl]-N,N,N-trimethyl-ammonium methylsulfate, Boehringer-Mannheim) or an equivalent, such as LIPOFECTIN. The amount of nucleic acid used is not critical to the practice of the invention; acceptable results may be achieved with 0.1-100 micrograms of nucleic acid/105 cells. For example, a ratio of about 0.5 micrograms of plasmid vector in 3 micrograms of DOTAP per 105 cells can be used.


A miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibiting compound can also be administered to a subject by any suitable enteral or parenteral administration route. Suitable enteral administration routes for the present methods include, for example, oral, rectal, or intranasal delivery. Suitable parenteral administration routes include, for example, intravascular administration (for example, intravenous bolus injection, intravenous infusion, intra-arterial bolus injection, intra-arterial infusion and catheter instillation into the vasculature); pen- and intra-tissue injection (for example, peri-tumoral and intra-tumoral injection, intra-retinal injection, or subretinal injection); subcutaneous injection or deposition, including subcutaneous infusion (such as by osmotic pumps); direct application to the tissue of interest, for example by a catheter or other placement device (for example, a retinal pellet or a suppository or an implant comprising a porous, non-porous, or gelatinous material); and inhalation. Particularly suitable administration routes are injection, infusion and direct injection into the tumor.


In the present methods, a miR gene product or miR gene product expression inhibiting compound can be administered to the subject either as naked RNA, in combination with a delivery reagent, or as a nucleic acid (for example, a recombinant plasmid or viral vector) comprising sequences that express the miR gene product or expression inhibiting compound. Suitable delivery reagents include, for example, the Mirus Transit TKO lipophilic reagent; lipofectin; lipofectamine; cellfectin; polycations (for example, polylysine), and liposomes.


Recombinant plasmids and viral vectors comprising sequences that express the miR gene products or miR gene expression inhibiting compounds, and techniques for delivering such plasmids and vectors to cancer cells, are discussed herein.


In a particular embodiment, liposomes are used to deliver a miR gene product or miR gene expression-inhibiting compound (or nucleic acids comprising sequences encoding them) to a subject. Liposomes can also increase the blood half-life of the gene products or nucleic acids. Suitable liposomes for use in the invention can be formed from standard vesicle-forming lipids, which generally include neutral or negatively charged phospholipids and a sterol, such as cholesterol. The selection of lipids is generally guided by consideration of factors, such as the desired liposome size and half-life of the liposomes in the blood stream. A variety of methods are known for preparing liposomes, for example, as described in Szoka et al. (1980), Ann. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 9:467; and U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,235,871, 4,501,728, 4,837,028, and 5,019,369, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.


The liposomes for use in the present methods can comprise a ligand molecule that targets the liposome to cancer cells. Ligands which bind to receptors prevalent in cancer cells, such as monoclonal antibodies that bind to tumor cell antigens, are preferred.


The liposomes for use in the present methods can also be modified so as to avoid clearance by the mononuclear macrophage system (“MMS”) and reticuloendothelial system (“RES”). Such modified liposomes have opsonization-inhibition moieties on the surface or incorporated into the liposome structure. In a particularly preferred embodiment, a liposome of the invention can comprise both opsonization-inhibition moieties and a ligand.


Opsonization-inhibiting moieties for use in preparing the liposomes of the invention are typically large hydrophilic polymers that are bound to the liposome membrane. As used herein, an opsonization inhibiting moiety is “bound” to a liposome membrane when it is chemically or physically attached to the membrane, for example, by the intercalation of a lipid-soluble anchor into the membrane itself, or by binding directly to active groups of membrane lipids. These opsonization-inhibiting hydrophilic polymers form a protective surface layer that significantly decreases the uptake of the liposomes by the MMS and RES; for example, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,920,016, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.


Opsonization inhibiting moieties suitable for modifying liposomes are preferably water-soluble polymers with a number-average molecular weight from about 500 to about 40,000 daltons, and more preferably from about 2,000 to about 20,000 daltons. Such polymers include polyethylene glycol (PEG) or polypropylene glycol (PPG) derivatives; for example, methoxy PEG or PPG, and PEG or PPG stearate; synthetic polymers, such as polyacrylamide or poly N-vinyl pyrrolidone; linear, branched, or dendrimeric polyamidoamines; polyacrylic acids; polyalcohols, for example, polyvinylalcohol and polyxylitol to which carboxylic or amino groups are chemically linked, as well as gangliosides, such as ganglioside GM1. Copolymers of PEG, methoxy PEG, or methoxy PPG, or derivatives thereof, are also suitable. In addition, the opsonization inhibiting polymer can be a block copolymer of PEG and either a polyamino acid, polysaccharide, polyamidoamine, polyethyleneamine, or polynucleotide. The opsonization inhibiting polymers can also be natural polysaccharides containing amino acids or carboxylic acids, for example, galacturonic acid, glucuronic acid, mannuronic acid, hyaluronic acid, pectic acid, neuraminic acid, alginic acid, carrageenan; aminated polysaccharides or oligosaccharides (linear or branched); or carboxylated polysaccharides or oligosaccharides, for example, reacted with derivatives of carbonic acids with resultant linking of carboxylic groups. Preferably, the opsonization-inhibiting moiety is a PEG, PPG, or derivatives thereof. Liposomes modified with PEG or PEG-derivatives are sometimes called “PEGylated liposomes.”


The opsonization inhibiting moiety can be bound to the liposome membrane by any one of numerous well-known techniques. For example, an N-hydroxysuccinimide ester of PEG can be bound to a phosphatidyl-ethanolamine lipid-soluble anchor, and then bound to a membrane. Similarly, a dextran polymer can be derivatized with a stearylamine lipid-soluble anchor via reductive amination using Na(CN)BH3 and a solvent mixture, such as tetrahydrofuran and water in a 30:12 ratio at 60° C.


Liposomes modified with opsonization-inhibition moieties remain in the circulation much longer than unmodified liposomes. For this reason, such liposomes are sometimes called “stealth” liposomes. Stealth liposomes are known to accumulate in tissues fed by porous or “leaky” microvasculature. Thus, tissue characterized by such microvasculature defects, for example solid tumors, will efficiently accumulate these liposomes; see Gabizon, et al. (1988), Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., U.S.A., 18:6949-53. In addition, the reduced uptake by the RES lowers the toxicity of stealth liposomes by preventing significant accumulation of the liposomes in the liver and spleen. Thus, liposomes that are modified with opsonization-inhibition moieties are particularly suited to deliver the miR gene products or miR gene expression inhibition compounds (or nucleic acids comprising sequences encoding them) to tumor cells.


The miR gene products or miR gene expression inhibition compounds can be formulated as pharmaceutical compositions, sometimes called “medicaments,” prior to administering them to a subject, according to techniques known in the art. Accordingly, the invention encompasses pharmaceutical compositions for treating breast cancer. In one embodiment, the pharmaceutical compositions comprise at least one isolated miR gene product and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier. In a particular embodiment, the at least one miR gene product corresponds to a miR gene product that has a decreased level of expression in breast cancer cells relative to suitable control cells. In certain embodiments the isolated miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-145, miR-10b, miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, miR-101-1, miR-143 and combinations thereof.


In other embodiments, the pharmaceutical compositions of the invention comprise at least one miR expression inhibition compound. In a particular embodiment, the at least one miR gene expression inhibition compound is specific for a miR gene whose expression is greater in breast cancer cells than control cells. In certain embodiments, the miR gene expression inhibition compound is specific for one or more miR gene products selected from the group consisting of miR-21, miR-155, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-213, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210, miR-213 and combinations thereof.


Pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention are characterized as being at least sterile and pyrogen-free. As used herein, “pharmaceutical formulations” include formulations for human and veterinary use. Methods for preparing pharmaceutical compositions of the invention are within the skill in the art, for example as described in Remington's Pharmaceutical Science, 17th ed., Mack Publishing Company, Easton, Pa. (1985), the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.


The present pharmaceutical formulations comprise at least one miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibition compound (or at least one nucleic acid comprising sequences encoding them) (for example, 0.1 to 90% by weight), or a physiologically acceptable salt thereof, mixed with a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier. The pharmaceutical formulations of the invention can also comprise at least one miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibition compound (or at least one nucleic acid comprising sequences encoding them) which are encapsulated by liposomes and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier. In one embodiment, the pharmaceutical compositions comprise a miR gene or gene product that is not miR-15, miR-16, miR-143 and/or miR-145.


Especially suitable pharmaceutically-acceptable carriers are water, buffered water, normal saline, 0.4% saline, 0.3% glycine, hyaluronic acid and the like.


In a particular embodiment, the pharmaceutical compositions of the invention comprise at least one miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibition compound (or at least one nucleic acid comprising sequences encoding them) which is resistant to degradation by nucleases. One skilled in the art can readily synthesize nucleic acids which are nuclease resistant, for example by incorporating one or more ribonucleotides that are modified at the 2′-position into the miR gene products. Suitable 2′-modified ribonucleotides include those modified at the 2′-position with fluoro, amino, alkyl, alkoxy, and O-allyl.


Pharmaceutical compositions of the invention can also comprise conventional pharmaceutical excipients and/or additives. Suitable pharmaceutical excipients include stabilizers, antioxidants, osmolality adjusting agents, buffers, and pH adjusting agents. Suitable additives include, for example, physiologically biocompatible buffers (for example, tromethamine hydrochloride), additions of chelants (such as, for example, DTPA or DTPA-bisamide) or calcium chelate complexes (such as, for example, calcium DTPA, CaNaDTPA-bisamide), or, optionally, additions of calcium or sodium salts (for example, calcium chloride, calcium ascorbate, calcium gluconate or calcium lactate). Pharmaceutical compositions of the invention can be packaged for use in liquid form, or can be lyophilized.


For solid pharmaceutical compositions of the invention, conventional nontoxic solid pharmaceutically-acceptable carriers can be used; for example, pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharin, talcum, cellulose, glucose, sucrose, magnesium carbonate, and the like.


For example, a solid pharmaceutical composition for oral administration can comprise any of the carriers and excipients listed above and 10-95%, preferably 25%-75%, of the at least one miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibition compound (or at least one nucleic acid comprising sequences encoding them). A pharmaceutical composition for aerosol (inhalational) administration can comprise 0.01-20% by weight, preferably 1%-10% by weight, of the at least one miR gene product or miR gene expression inhibition compound (or at least one nucleic acid comprising sequences encoding them) encapsulated in a liposome as described above, and a propellant. A carrier can also be included as desired; for example, lecithin for intranasal delivery.


The invention also encompasses methods of identifying an anti-breast cancer agent, comprising providing a test agent to a cell and measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in the cell. In one embodiment, the method comprises providing a test agent to a cell and measuring the level of at least one miR gene product associated with decreased expression levels in breast cancer cells. An increase in the level of the miR gene product in the cell, relative to a suitable control cell, is indicative of the test agent being an anti-breast cancer agent. In a particular embodiment, at least one miR gene product associated with decreased expression levels in breast cancer cells is selected from the group consisting of miR-145, miR-10b, miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, miR-101-1, miR-143 and combinations thereof.


In other embodiments the method comprises providing a test agent to a cell and measuring the level of at least one miR gene product associated with increased expression levels in breast cancer cells. A decrease in the level of the miR gene product in the cell, relative to a suitable control cell, is indicative of the test agent being an anti-breast cancer agent. In a particular embodiment, at least one miR gene product associated with increased expression levels in breast cancer cells is selected from the group consisting of miR-21, miR-155, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-213, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210, miR-213 and combinations thereof.


Suitable agents include, but are not limited to drugs (for example, small molecules, peptides), and biological macromolecules (for example, proteins, nucleic acids). The agent can be produced recombinantly, synthetically, or it may be isolated (i.e., purified) from a natural source. Various methods for providing such agents to a cell (for example, transfection) are well known in the art, and several of such methods are described hereinabove. Methods for detecting the expression of at least one miR gene product (for example, Northern blotting, in situ hybridization, RT-PCR, expression profiling) are also well known in the art. Several of these methods are also described hereinabove.


The invention will now be illustrated by the following non-limiting examples.


Example 1
Identification of a microRNA Expression Signature that Discriminates Breast Cancer Tissues from Normal Tissues

Materials and Methods


Breast Cancer Samples and Cell Lines.


RNAs from primary tumors were obtained from 76 samples collected at the University of Ferrara (Italy), Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milano (Italy) and Thomas Jefferson University (Philadelphia, Pa.). Clinico-pathological information was available for 58 tumor samples. RNA from normal samples consisted of 6 pools of RNA from 5 normal breast tissues each, as well as RNA from 4 additional single breast tissues. Breast cancer RNAs were also obtained from the following cell lines: Hs578-T, MCF7, T47D, BT20, SK-BR-3, HBL100, HCC2218, MDA-MB-175, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-361, MDA-MB-435, MDA-MB-436, MDA-MB-453 and MDAMB-468.


miRNA Microarray.


Total RNA isolation was performed with Trizol Reagent (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. RNA labeling and hybridization on microRNA microarray chips was performed as previously described (Liu, C.-G., et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101:9740-9744 (2004)). Briefly, 5 μg of RNA from each sample was labeled with biotin during reverse transcription using random hexamers. Hybridization was carried out on a miRNA microarray chip (KCl version 1.0), which contains 368 probes, including 245 human and mouse miRNA genes, in triplicate. Hybridization signals were detected by binding of biotin to a Streptavidin-Alexa647 conjugate using a Perkin-Elmer ScanArray XL5K. Scanner images were quantified by the Quantarray software (Perkin Elmer).


Statistical and bioinformatic analysis of microarray data. Raw data were normalized and analyzed using the GeneSpring® software, version 7.2 (SiliconGenetics, Redwood City, Calif.). Expression data were median centered. Statistical comparisons were performed by ANOVA (Analysis of Variance), using the Benjamini and Hochberg correction for reduction of false positives. Prognostic miRNAs for tumor or normal class prediction were determined using both the PAM software (Prediction Analysis of Microarrays) (Tibshirani, R., et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99:6567-6572 (2002)) and the Support Vector Machine (Furey, T. S., et al. Bioinformatics 16: 906-914 (2000)) software. Both algorithms were used for Cross-validation and Test-set prediction. All data were submitted using MIAMExpress to the Array Express database.


Northern Blotting.


Northern blot analysis was performed as previously described (Calin, G. A., et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99:15524-29 (2002)). RNA samples (10 μg each) were electrophoresed on 15% acrylamide, 7 M urea Criterion pre-casted gels (Bio-Rad) and transferred onto Hybond-N+ membrane (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The hybridization was performed at 37° C. in 7% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)/0.2M Na2PO4 (pH 7.0) for 16 hours. Membranes were washed twice at 42° C. with 2× standard saline phosphate (0.18 M NaCl/10 mM phosphate, pH 7.4), supplemented with 1 mM EDTA (SSPE) and 0.1% SDS, and twice with 0.5×SSPE/0.1% SDS. Oligonucleotide probes were complementary to the sequence of the corresponding mature microRNA (see Sanger miR Registry): miR-21 5′-TCA ACA TCA GTC TGA TAA GCT A-3′ (SEQ ID NO:287); miR-125b1: 5′-TCA CAA GTT AGG GTC TCA GGG A-3′ (SEQ ID NO:288); miR-145: 5′-AAG GGA TTC CTG GGA AAA CTG GAC-3′ (SEQ ID NO:289). An oligonucleotide that was complementary to the U6 RNA (5′-GCA GGG GCC ATG CTA ATC TTC TCT GTA TCG-3′ (SEQ ID NO:290)) was used for normalizing expression levels. 200 ng of each probe was end labeled with 100 mCi [gamma-32P]-ATP using a polynucleotide kinase (Roche). Northern Blots were stripped in a boiling 0.1% SDS solution for 10 minutes before re-hybridization.


Results


A microRNA microarray (Liu, C.-G., et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101:9740-9744 (2004)) was used to generate microRNA expression profiles for 10 normal and 76 neoplastic breast tissues. Each tumor sample was derived from a single specimen, while 6 of the 10 normal samples consisted of pools of RNA made from five different normal breast tissues. Hence, 34 normal breast samples were actually examined in the study.


To identify miRNAs that were differentially-expressed between normal and tumor samples, and, therefore, can be used to distinguish normal from cancerous breast tissues, analyses of variance and class prediction statistical tools were utilized. Results of the ANOVA analysis on normalized data generated a profile of differentially-expressed miRNAs (p<0.05) between normal and cancerous breast tissues (Table 2). Cluster analysis, based on differentially-expressed miRNA, generated a tree having a clear distinction between normal and cancer tissues (FIG. 1A).


To accurately identify a set of predictive miRNAs capable of differentiating normal from breast cancer tissues, we used Support Vector Machine (GeneSpring software) and PAM (Prediction Analysis of Microarrays). Results from the two class prediction analyses largely overlapped (Table 3 and FIG. 1B). Among the miRNAs listed in Table 3, 11 of 15 have an ANOVA p-value of less than 0.05. To confirm the results obtained by microarray analysis, we performed Northern blot analysis to assess expression levels for a subset of microRNAs, namely, mir-125b, mir-145 and mir-21, that were differentially-expressed in normal and cancerous breast tissues. Northern blot analysis confirmed results obtained by microarray analysis. In many cases, expression differences appeared stronger than those anticipated by the microarray studies (FIG. 1C).









TABLE 2







miRNAs differentially-expressed between breast carcinoma and normal breast tissue.










Breast Cancer
Normal Breast












Median
Range
Median
Range

















P-value
Normalized
Min

Max
Normalized
Min

Max



















let-7a-2
1.94E−02
1.67
0.96
-
6.21
2.30
1.34
-
5.00


let-7a-3
4.19E−02
1.28
0.81
-
3.79
1.58
1.02
-
2.91


let-7d (= 7d-v1)
4.81E−03
0.90
0.59
-
1.54
1.01
0.83
-
1.25


let-7f-2
6.57E−03
0.84
0.61
-
1.58
0.92
0.76
-
1.03


let-7f (= let-7d-v2)
3.38E−02
2.05
1.02
-
7.49
1.53
1.01
-
3.47


mir-009-1 (mir-131-1)
9.12E−03
1.38
0.69
-
4.18
1.01
0.81
-
2.44


mir-010b
4.49E−02
1.11
0.69
-
4.78
1.70
0.96
-
8.32


mir-021
4.67E−03
1.67
0.66
-
28.43
1.08
0.80
-
2.31


mir-034 (=mir-17D)
1.06E−02
1.87
0.70
-
8.40
1.09
0.65
-
3.17


mir-101-1
4.15E−03
0.83
0.52
-
1.28
0.90
0.77
-
1.05


mir-122a
3.43E−03
2.21
0.93
-
8.08
1.48
1.06
-
3.67


mir-125a
3.28E−03
1.20
0.69
-
2.35
1.73
1.21
-
3.34


mir-125b-1
2.85E−02
1.30
0.55
-
8.85
2.87
1.45
-
18.38


mir-125b-2
2.33E−02
1.26
0.69
-
8.29
2.83
1.40
-
18.78


mir-126b
1.60E−02
1.12
0.68
-
7.34
1.02
0.89
-
1.27


mir-136
2.42E−03
1.32
0.74
-
10.28
1.06
0.76
-
1.47


mir-143
7.11E−03
0.87
0.68
-
1.33
0.98
0.81
-
1.17


mir-145
4.02E−03
1.52
0.92
-
8.46
3.61
1.65
-
14.45


mir-149
2.75E−02
1.11
0.53
-
1.73
1.03
0.83
-
1.22


mir-155(BIC)
1.24E−03
1.75
0.95
-
11.45
1.37
1.11
-
1.88


mir-191
4.28E−02
5.17
1.03
-
37.81
3.12
1.45
-
14.58


mir-196-1
1.07E−02
1.20
0.57
-
3.95
0.95
0.66
-
1.75


mir-196-2
1.16E−03
1.46
0.57
-
5.55
1.04
0.79
-
1.80


mir-202
1.25E−02
1.05
0.71
-
2.03
0.89
0.65
-
1.20


mir-203
4.08E−07
1.12
0.50
-
5.89
0.86
0.71
-
1.04


mir-204
2.15E−03
0.78
0.48
-
1.04
0.89
0.72
-
1.08


mir-206
1.42E−02
2.55
1.22
-
8.42
1.95
1.34
-
3.22


mir-210
6.40E−13
1.60
0.98
-
12.13
1.12
0.97
-
1.29


mir-213
1.08E−02
3.72
1.42
-
40.83
2.47
1.35
-
5.91
















TABLE 3







Normal and tumor breast tissues class predictor microRNAs













Median expression
ANOVAa
SVM prediction
PAM scorec















miRNA name
Cancer
Normal
Probability
strengthb
Cancer
Normal
Chromos map

















mir-009-1
1.36
1.01
0.0091
8.05
0.011
−0.102
1q22


mir-010b
1.11
1.70
0.0449
8.70
−0.032
0.299
2q31


mir-021
1.67
1.08
0.0047
10.20
0.025
−0.235
17q23.2


mir-034
1.67
1.09
0.0108
8.05
0.011
−0.106
1p36.22


mir-102 (mir-29b)
1.36
1.14
>0.10
8.92
0.000
−0.004
1q32.2-32.3


mir-123 (mir-126)
0.92
1.13
0.0940
9.13
−0.015
0.138
9q34


mir-125a
1.20
1.73
0.0033
8.99
−0.040
0.381
19q13.4


mir-125b-1
1.30
2.87
0.0265
14.78
−0.096
0.915
11q24.1


mir-125b-2
1.26
2.63
0.0233
17.62
−0.106
1.006
21q11.2


mir-140-as
0.93
1.10
0.0695
11.01
−0.005
0.050
16q22.1


mir-145
1.52
3.61
0.0040
12.93
−0.158
1.502
5q32-33


mir-155(BIC)
1.75
1.37
0.0012
10.92
0.003
−0.030
21q21


mir-194
0.96
1.09
>0.10
11.12
−0.025
0.234
1q41


mir-204
0.78
0.89
0.0022
8.10
−0.015
0.144
9q21.1


mir-213
3.72
2.47
0.0108
9.44
0.023
−0.220
1q31.3-q32.1






aAnalysis of Variance (Welch t-test in Genespring software package) as calculated in Table 2.




bSupport Vector Machine prediction analysis tool (from Genespring 7.2 software package).








Prediction strengths are calculated as negative natural log of the probability to predict the observed number of samples, in one of the two classes, by chance. The higher is the score, the best is the prediction strength.


c—Centroid scores for the two classes of the Prediction Analysis of Microarrays (Tibshirani, R., et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99:6567-6572 (2002)).


Of the 29 miRNAs whose expression is significantly (p<0.05) deregulated according to the microarray analysis, a set of 15 miRNAs were able to correctly predict the nature of the sample analyzed (i.e., normal vs. tumor) with 100% accuracy. Among the differentially-expressed miRNAs, miR-10b, miR-125b, miR145, miR-21 and miR-155 were the most consistently deregulated miRNAs in breast cancer samples. Three of these, namely, miR-10b, miR-125b and miR-145, were down-regulated, while the remaining two, miR-21 and miR-155, were up-regulated, suggesting that they might act as tumor suppressor genes or oncogenes, respectively.


Example 2
Determination of Putative Gene Targets of miRNAs that are Deregulated in Breast Cancer Tissues

At present, the lack of knowledge about bona fide miRNA gene targets hampers a full understanding of which biological functions are deregulated in cancers characterized by aberrant miRNA expression. To identify putative targets of the most significantly de-regulated miRNAs from our study: miR-10b, miR125b, miR-145, miR-21 and miR-155 (see Example 1), we utilized multiple computational approaches. In particular, the analysis was performed using three algorithms, miRanda, TargetScan and PicTar, which are used to predict human miRNA gene targets (Enright, A. J., et al. Genome Biol. 5:R1 (2003); Lewis, B. P. et al., Cell 115:787-798 (2003); Krek, A., et al., Nat. Genet. 37:495-500 (2005)). The results obtained using each of the three algorithms were cross-referenced with one another to validate putative targets, and only targets that were identified by at least 2 of the 3 algorithms were considered. Results of this analysis are presented in Table 4.


Several genes with potential oncogenic functions were identified as putative targets of miRNAs that are down-regulated in breast cancer samples. Notably, oncogenes were identified as targets of miR-10b (for example, FLT1, the v-crk homolog, the growth factor BDNF and the transducing factor SHC1), miR-125b (for example, YES, ETS1, TEL, AKT3, the growth factor receptor FGFR2 and members of the mitogen-activated signal transduction pathway VTS58635, MAP3K10, MAP3K11, MAPK14), and miR-145 (for example, MYCN, FOS, YES and FLI1, integration site of Friend leukemia virus, cell cycle promoters, such as cyclins D2 and L1, MAPK transduction proteins, such as MAP3K3 and MAP4K4). The proto-oncogene, YES, and the core-binding transcription factor, CBFB, were determined to be potential targets of both miR-125 and miR-145.


Consistent with these findings, multiple tumor suppressor genes were identified as targets of miR-21 and miR-155, miRNAs that are up-regulated in breast cancer cells. For miR-21, the TGFB gene was predicted as target by all three methods. For miR-155, potential targets included the tumor suppressor genes, SOCS1 and APC, and the kinase, WEE1, which blocks the activity of Cdc2 and prevents entry into mitosis. The hypoxia inducible factor, HIF1A, was also a predicted target of miR-155. Notably, the tripartite motif-containing protein TRIM2, the proto-oncogene, SKI, and the RAS homologs, RAB6A and RAB6C, were found as potential targets of both miR-21 and miR-155.









TABLE 4







Putative gene targets of differentially-expressed miRNA identified by at least two prediction methods














Gene

Prediction



miRNA
Genbank
Symbol
Gene Name
algorithm
Gene Ontology condensed





miR-
AL117516
38596
strand-exchange protein 1
P + T
exonuclease activity|nucleus


10b


miR-
NM_004915
ABCG1
ATP-binding cassette,
P + T
ATP binding|ATPase activity|ATPase activity,


10b


sub-family G (WHITE),

coupled to transmembrane movement of





member 1

substances|L-tryptophan transporter







activity|cholesterol homeostasis|cholesterol







metabolism|detection of hormone stimulus|integral to







plasma membrane|lipid







transport|membrane|membrane fraction|permease







activity|protein dimerization activity|purine nucleotide







transporter activity|response to organic substance


miR-
NM_001148
ANK2
ankyrin 2, neuronal
P + T
actin


10b




cytoskeleton|membrane|metabolism|oxidoreductase







activity|protein binding|signal transduction|structural







constituent of cytoskeleton


miR-
NM_020987
ANK3
ankyrin 3, node of
P + T
Golgi apparatus|cytoskeletal


10b


Ranvier (ankyrin G)

anchoring|cytoskeleton|cytoskeleton|endoplasmic







reticulum|protein binding|protein targeting|signal







transduction|structural constituent of cytoskeleton


miR-
NM_016376
ANKHZN
ANKHZN protein
P + T
endocytosis|endosome membrane|membrane|protein


10b




binding|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_006380
APPBP2
amyloid beta precursor
P + T
binding|cytoplasm|intracellular protein


10b


protein (cytoplasmic

transport|membrane|microtubule associated





tail) binding protein 2

complex|microtubule motor activity|nucleus


miR-
NM_006321
ARIH2
ariadne homolog 2
P + T
development|nucleic acid binding|nucleus|protein


10b


(Drosophila)

ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase complex|ubiquitin-







protein ligase activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_001668
ARNT
aryl hydrocarbon
P + T
aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator


10b


receptor nuclear

activity|nucleus|nucleus|protein-nucleus import,





translocator

translocation|receptor activity|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transducer







activity|signal transduction|transcription coactivator







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription







factor activity


miR-
AI829840
ASXL1
ESTs, Weakly similar
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


10b


to SFRB_HUMAN

dependent|transcription





Splicing factor





arginine/serine-rich 11





(Arginine-rich 54 kDa





nuclear protein) (P54)





[H. sapiens]


miR-
NM_021813
BACH2
BTB and CNC
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|protein binding|regulation of


10b


homology 1, basic

transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription





leucine zipper





transcription factor 2


miR-
NM_013450
BAZ2B
bromodomain adjacent
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


10b


to zinc finger domain,

DNA-dependent|transcription





2B


miR-
NM_001706
BCL6
B-cell CLL/lymphoma
P + T
inflammatory response|mediator complex|negative


10b


6 (zinc finger protein

regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II





51)

promoter|nucleus|positive regulation of cell







proliferation|protein binding|regulation of







transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_001709
BDNF
brain-derived
P + T
growth factor activity|growth factor


10b


neurotrophic factor

activity|neurogenesis


miR-
NM_006624
BS69
adenovirus 5 E1A
P + T
DNA binding|cell cycle|cell proliferation|negative


10b


binding protein

regulation of cell cycle|negative regulation of







transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription


miR-
AF101784
BTRC
beta-transducin repeat
P + T
Wnt receptor signaling pathway|endoplasmic


10b


containing

reticulum|ligase activity|signal transduction|ubiquitin







conjugating enzyme activity|ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin-







dependent protein catabolism


miR-
NM_005808
C3orf8
HYA22 protein
P + T
biological_process unknown|molecular_function


10b




unknown|nucleus


miR-
BF111268
CAMK2G
calcium/calmodulin-
P + T
ATP binding|ATP binding|calcium- and calmodulin-


10b


dependent protein

dependent protein kinase activity|calcium-dependent





kinase (CaM kinase) II

protein serine/threonine phosphatase





gamma

activity|calmodulin binding|cellular_component







unknown|insulin secretion|kinase activity|protein







amino acid phosphorylation|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|signal







transduction|transferase activity


miR-
NM_020184
CNNM4
cyclin M4
P + T


10b


miR-
NM_022730
COPS7B
COP9 constitutive
P + T
signalosome complex


10b


photomorphogenic





homolog subunit 7B





(Arabidopsis)


miR-
NM_016823
CRK
v-crk sarcoma virus
P + T
SH3/SH2 adaptor activity|actin cytoskeleton


10b


CT10 oncogene

organization and biogenesis|cell





homolog (avian)

motility|cytoplasm|intracellular signaling







cascade|nucleus|regulation of transcription from RNA







polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_020248
CTNNBIP1
catenin, beta interacting
P + T
Wnt receptor signaling pathway|beta-catenin


10b


protein 1

binding|cell







proliferation|development|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transduction


miR-
NM_018959
DAZAP1
DAZ associated protein 1
P + T
RNA binding|cell differentiation|nucleotide


10b




binding|nucleus|spermatogenesis


miR-
AL136828
DKFZP434K0427
hypothetical protein
P + T
cation transport|cation transporter activity


10b


DKFZp434K0427


miR-
R20763
DKFZp547J036
ELAV (embryonic
P + T


10b


lethal, abnormal vision,






Drosophila)-like 3 (Hu






antigen C)


miR-
AF009204
DLGAP2
discs, large
P + T
cell-cell signaling|membrane|nerve-nerve synaptic


10b


(Drosophila) homolog-

transmission|neurofilament|protein binding





associated protein 2


miR-
NM_001949
E2F3
E2F transcription factor 3
P + T
nucleus|protein binding|regulation of cell


10b




cycle|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor complex|transcription







initiation from RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_022659
EBF2
early B-cell factor 2
P + T
DNA binding|development|nucleus|regulation of


10b




transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription


miR-
NM_004432
ELAVL2
ELAV (embryonic
P + T
RNA binding|mRNA 3′-UTR binding|nucleotide


10b


lethal, abnormal vision,

binding|regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent






Drosophila)-like 2 (Hu






antigen B)


miR-
NM_001420
ELAVL3
ELAV (embryonic
P + T
RNA binding|cell differentiation|mRNA 3′-UTR


10b


lethal, abnormal vision,

binding|neurogenesis|nucleotide binding






Drosophila)-like 3 (Hu






antigen C)


miR-
NM_004438
EPHA4
EphA4
P + T
ATP binding|ephrin receptor activity|integral to


10b




plasma membrane|membrane|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|receptor activity|signal







transduction|transferase activity|transmembrane







receptor protein tyrosine kinase signaling pathway


miR-
AL035703
EPHA8;
EphA8
P + T


10b

EEK;




HEK3;




Hek3;




KIAA1459


miR-
NM_004468
FHL3
four and a half LIM
P + T
muscle development|zinc ion binding


10b

domains 3


miR-
NM_024679
FLJ11939
hypothetical protein
P + T


10b


FLJ11939


miR-
AI742838
FLJ32122
hypothetical protein
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase binding|guanyl-nucleotide


10b


FLJ32122

exchange factor activity


miR-
AL040935
FLJ33957
hypothetical protein
P + T
protein binding


10b


FLJ33957


miR-
AA058828
FLT1
ESTs
P + T
ATP binding|angiogenesis|cell


10b




differentiation|extracellular space|integral to plasma







membrane|membrane|positive regulation of cell







proliferation|pregnancy|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|receptor activity|transferase







activity|transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine







kinase signaling pathway|vascular endothelial growth







factor receptor activity


miR-
NM_004860
FXR2
fragile X mental
P + T
RNA binding|cytoplasm|cytosolic large ribosomal


10b


retardation, autosomal

subunit (sensu Eukaryota)|nucleus





homolog 2


miR-
NM_020474
GALNT1
UDP-N-acetyl-alpha-D-
P + T
Golgi apparatus|O-linked glycosylation|integral to


10b


galactosamine:polypeptide

membrane|manganese ion binding|polypeptide N-





N-

acetylgalactosaminyltransferase activity|sugar





acetylgalactosaminyl-

binding|transferase activity, transferring glycosyl





transferase 1

groups





(GalNAc-T1)


miR-
D87811
GATA6
GATA binding protein 6
P + T
muscle development|nucleus|positive regulation of


10b




transcription|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcriptional activator activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_000840
GRM3
glutamate receptor,
P + T
G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling


10b


metabotropic 3

pathway|integral to plasma







membrane|membrane|metabotropic glutamate,







GABA-B-like receptor activity|negative regulation of







adenylate cyclase activity|receptor activity|signal







transduction|synaptic transmission


miR-
NM_005316
GTF2H1
general transcription
P + T
DNA repair|[RNA-polymerase]-subunit kinase


10b


factor IIH, polypeptide

activity|general RNA polymerase II transcription





1, 62 kDa

factor activity|nucleus|regulation of cyclin dependent







protein kinase activity|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription factor







TFIIH complex|transcription from RNA polymerase







II promoter


miR-
AF232772
HAS3
hyaluronan synthase 3
P + T
carbohydrate metabolism|hyaluronan synthase


10b




activity|integral to plasma membrane|transferase







activity, transferring glycosyl groups


miR-
AL023584
HIVEP2
human
P + T


10b


immunodeficiency virus





type I enhancer binding





protein 2


miR-
S79910
HOXA1
homeo box A1
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


10b




activity|development|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription factor







activity


miR-
NM_030661
HOXA3
homeo box A3
P + T
development|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


10b




DNA-dependent|transcription factor activity


miR-
AW299531
HOXD10
homeo box D10
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


10b




activity|development|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription factor







activity


miR-
BF031714
HYA22
HYA22 protein
P + T


10b


miR-
NM_001546
ID4
inhibitor of DNA
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription from RNA


10b


binding 4, dominant

polymerase II promoter|transcription corepressor





negative helix-loop-

activity





helix protein


miR-
NM_014333
IGSF4
immunoglobulin
P + T


10b


superfamily, member 4


miR-
NM_014271
IL1RAPL1
interleukin 1 receptor
P + T
integral to membrane|learning and/or


10b


accessory protein-like 1

memory|membrane|signal







transduction|transmembrane receptor activity


miR-
D87450
KIAA0261
KIAA0261 protein
P + T


10b


miR-
AL117518
KIAA0978
KIAA0978 protein
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


10b




dependent|transcription


miR-
AK025960
KIAA1255
KIAA1255 protein
P + T
endocytosis|endosome membrane|membrane|protein


10b




binding|zinc ion binding


miR-
AB037797
KIAA1376
KIAA1376 protein
P + T


10b


miR-
NM_004795
KL
klotho
P + T
beta-glucosidase activity|carbohydrate


10b




metabolism|extracellular space|glucosidase







activity|integral to membrane|integral to plasma







membrane|membrane fraction|signal transducer







activity|soluble fraction


miR-
NM_015995
KLF13
Kruppel-like factor 13
P + T
DNA binding|RNA polymerase II transcription factor


10b




activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription from RNA







polymerase II promoter|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_004235
KLF4
Kruppel-like factor 4
P + T
mesodermal cell fate determination|negative


10b


(gut)

regulation of cell proliferation|negative regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|negative regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|nucleic acid







binding|nucleus|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity|transcriptional







activator activity|transcriptional activator







activity|transcriptional repressor







activity|transcriptional repressor activity|zinc ion







binding|zinc ion binding


miR-
AW511293
LOC144455
hypothetical protein
P + T
regulation of cell cycle|regulation of transcription,


10b


BC016658

DNA-dependent|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor complex


miR-
NM_014921
LPHN1
lectomedin-2
P + T
G-protein coupled receptor activity|integral to


10b




membrane|latrotoxin receptor







activity|membrane|neuropeptide signaling







pathway|receptor activity|signal transduction|sugar







binding


miR-
NM_012325
MAPRE1
microtubule-associated
P + T
cell proliferation|cytokinesis|microtubule


10b


protein, RP/EB family,

binding|mitosis|protein C-terminus binding|regulation





member 1

of cell cycle


miR-
AA824369
MGC4643
hypothetical protein
P + T
Wnt receptor signaling pathway|endoplasmic


10b


MGC4643

reticulum|ligase activity|signal transduction|ubiquitin







conjugating enzyme activity|ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin-







dependent protein catabolism


miR-
NM_021090
MTMR3
myotubularin related
P + T
cytoplasm|hydrolase activity|inositol or


10b


protein 3

phosphatidylinositol phosphatase







activity|membrane|membrane fraction|phospholipid







dephosphorylation|protein amino acid







dephosphorylation|protein serine/threonine







phosphatase activity|protein tyrosine phosphatase







activity|protein tyrosine/serine/threonine phosphatase







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
AI498126
NAC1
transcriptional repressor
P + T
protein binding


10b


NAC1


miR-
AF128458
NCOA6
nuclear receptor
P + T
DNA recombination|DNA repair|DNA


10b


coactivator 6

replication|brain development|chromatin







binding|embryonic development (sensu







Mammalia)|estrogen receptor binding|estrogen







receptor signaling pathway|glucocorticoid receptor







signaling pathway|heart development|ligand-







dependent nuclear receptor transcription coactivator







activity|myeloid blood cell







differentiation|nucleus|nucleus|positive regulation of







transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|protein binding|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|response to hormone







stimulus|retinoid X receptor binding|thyroid hormone







receptor binding|transcription|transcription factor







complex|transcription initiation from RNA







polymerase II promoter|transcriptional activator







activity


miR-
NM_006312
NCOR2
nuclear receptor co-
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


10b


repressor 2

DNA-dependent|transcription corepressor activity


miR-
NM_006599
NFAT5
nuclear factor of
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


10b


activated T-cells 5,

activity|excretion|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





tonicity-responsive

DNA-dependent|signal transduction|transcription







factor activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-
NM_006981
NR4A3
nuclear receptor
M + P + T
binding|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


10b


subfamily 4, group A,

DNA-dependent|steroid hormone receptor





member 3

activity|steroid hormone receptor activity|thyroid







hormone receptor activity|transcription|transcription







factor activity


miR-
NM_003822
NR5A2
nuclear receptor
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor activity,


10b


subfamily 5, group A,

enhancer





member 2

binding|morphogenesis|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|steroid hormone







receptor activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-
AA295257
NRP2
neuropilin 2
P + T
angiogenesis|axon guidance|cell adhesion|cell


10b




adhesion|cell differentiation|electron transport|electron







transporter activity|integral to membrane|integral to







membrane|membrane|membrane







fraction|neurogenesis|receptor activity|semaphorin







receptor activity|vascular endothelial growth factor







receptor activity|vascular endothelial growth factor







receptor activity


miR-
NM_000430
PAFAH1B1
platelet-activating
P + T
astral microtubule|cell cortex|cell cycle|cell


10b


factor acetylhydrolase,

differentiation|cell





isoform Ib, alpha

motility|cytokinesis|cytoskeleton|dynein





subunit 45 kDa

binding|establishment of mitotic spindle







orientation|kinetochore|lipid metabolism|microtubule







associated complex|microtubule-based







process|mitosis|neurogenesis|nuclear membrane|signal







transduction


miR-
NM_013382
POMT2
putative protein O-
P + T
O-linked glycosylation|dolichyl-phosphate-mannose-


10b


mannosyltransferase

protein mannosyltransferase activity|endoplasmic







reticulum|integral to membrane|magnesium ion







binding|membrane|transferase activity, transferring







glycosyl groups


miR-
BF337790
PURB
purine-rich element
P + T


10b


binding protein B


miR-
AI302106
RAP2A
RAP2A, member of
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|membrane|signal


10b


RAS oncogene family

transduction|small GTPase mediated signal







transduction


miR-
NM_002886
RAP2B
RAP2B, member of
P + T
GTP binding|protein transport|small GTPase mediated


10b


RAS oncogene family

signal transduction


miR-
NM_014781
RB1CC1
RB1-inducible coiled-
P + T
kinase activity


10b


coil 1


miR-
NM_012234
RYBP
RING1 and YY1
P + T
development|negative regulation of transcription from


10b


binding protein

RNA polymerase II promoter|nucleus|transcription







corepressor activity


miR-
NM_005506
SCARB2
scavenger receptor class
P + T
cell adhesion|integral to plasma membrane|lysosomal


10b


B, member 2

membrane|membrane fraction|receptor activity


miR-
AF225986
SCN3A
sodium channel,
P + T
cation channel activity|cation transport|integral to


10b


voltage-gated, type III,

membrane|membrane|sodium ion transport|voltage-





alpha polypeptide

gated sodium channel activity|voltage-gated sodium







channel complex


miR-
NM_002997
SDC1
syndecan 1
P + T
cytoskeletal protein binding|integral to plasma


10b




membrane|membrane


miR-
NM_006924
SFRS1
splicing factor,
P + T
RNA binding|mRNA splice site selection|nuclear


10b


arginine/serine-rich 1

mRNA splicing, via spliceosome|nucleotide





(splicing factor 2,

binding|nucleus





alternate splicing factor)


miR-
AI809967
SHC1
SHC (Src homology 2
P + T
activation of MAPK|activation of MAPK|intracellular


10b


domain containing)

signaling cascade|phospholipid binding|phospholipid





transforming protein 1

binding|plasma membrane|plasma membrane|positive







regulation of cell proliferation|positive regulation of







cell proliferation|positive regulation of







mitosis|positive regulation of mitosis|regulation of cell







growth|regulation of epidermal growth factor receptor







activity|transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine







kinase adaptor protein activity|transmembrane







receptor protein tyrosine kinase adaptor protein







activity


miR-
NM_018976
SLC38A
solute carrier family 38,
P + T
amino acid transport|amino acid-polyamine


10b


member 2

transporter activity|integral to







membrane|membrane|oxygen transport|oxygen







transporter activity|transport


miR-
NM_003794
SNX4
sorting nexin 4
P + T
endocytosis|intracellular signaling cascade|protein


10b




transport


miR-
NM_003103
SON
SON DNA binding
P + T
DNA binding|DNA binding|anti-apoptosis|double-


10b


protein

stranded RNA binding|intracellular|nucleic acid







binding|nucleus


miR-
Z48199
syndecan-1

P + T


10b


miR-
NM_003222
TFAP2C
transcription factor AP-
P + T
cell-cell signaling|nucleus|regulation of transcription


10b


2 gamma (activating

from RNA polymerase II





enhancer binding

promoter|transcription|transcription factor activity





protein 2 gamma)


miR-
NM_003275
TMOD1
tropomodulin
P + T
actin binding|cytoskeleton|cytoskeleton organization


10b




and biogenesis|tropomyosin binding


miR-
NM_003367
USF2
upstream transcription
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


10b


factor 2, c-fos

activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





interacting

dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
N62196
ZNF367
zinc finger protein 367
P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|zinc ion binding


10b


miR-
AI948503
ABCC4
ATP-binding cassette,
P + T
15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase (NAD+)


125b


sub-family C

activity|ATP binding|ATPase activity|ATPase





(CFTR/MRP), member 4

activity, coupled to transmembrane movement of







substances|chloride channel activity|integral to







membrane|ion transport|membrane


miR-
AL534702
ABHD3
abhydrolase domain
M + P + T


125b


containing 3


miR-
AL527773
ABR
active BCR-related
P + T
GTPase activator activity|guanyl-nucleotide exchange


125b


gene

factor activity|small GTPase mediated signal







transduction


miR-
NM_020039
ACCN2
amiloride-sensitive
P + T
amiloride-sensitive sodium channel activity|integral to


125b


cation channel 2,

plasma membrane|ion channel activity|ion





neuronal

transport|membrane|response to pH|signal







transduction|sodium ion transport


miR-
NM_003816
ADAM9
a disintegrin and
P + T
SH3 domain binding|integral to plasma


125b


metalloproteinase

membrane|integrin binding|metalloendopeptidase





domain 9 (meltrin

activity|protein binding|protein kinase binding|protein





gamma)

kinase cascade|proteolysis and peptidolysis|zinc ion







binding


miR-
L05500
ADCY1
adenylate cyclase 1
P + T
cAMP biosynthesis|calcium- and calmodulin-


125b


(brain)

responsive adenylate cyclase activity|calmodulin







binding|integral to membrane|intracellular signaling







cascade|magnesium ion binding


miR-
NM_017488
ADD2
adducin 2 (beta)
P + T
actin binding|actin cytoskeleton|calmodulin


125b




binding|membrane


miR-
NM_003488
AKAP1
A kinase (PRKA)
P + T
RNA binding|integral to


125b


anchor protein 1

membrane|mitochondrion|outer membrane


miR-
NM_005465
AKT3
v-akt murine thymoma
P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


125b


viral oncogene homolog

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase





3 (protein kinase B,

activity|signal transduction|transferase activity





gamma)


miR-
NM_001150
ANPEP
alanyl (membrane)
P + T
aminopeptidase activity|angiogenesis|cell


125b


aminopeptidase

differentiation|integral to plasma





(aminopeptidase N,

membrane|membrane alanyl aminopeptidase





aminopeptidase M,

activity|metallopeptidase activity|proteolysis and





microsomal

peptidolysis|receptor activity|zinc ion binding





aminopeptidase, CD13,





p150)


miR-
AF193759
APBA2BP
amyloid beta (A4)
M + P + T
Golgi cis cisterna|Golgi cis cisterna|antibiotic


125b


precursor protein-

biosynthesis|calcium ion





binding, family A,

binding|cytoplasm|cytoplasm|endoplasmic reticulum





member 2 binding

membrane|endoplasmic reticulum





protein

membrane|nucleus|oxidoreductase activity|protein







binding|protein binding|protein binding|protein







metabolism|protein metabolism|protein







secretion|protein secretion|regulation of amyloid







precursor protein biosynthesis


miR-
NM_000038
APC
adenomatosis polyposis
P + T
Wnt receptor signaling pathway|beta-catenin


125b


coli

binding|cell adhesion|microtubule binding|negative







regulation of cell cycle|protein complex







assembly|signal transduction


miR-
NM_001655
ARCN1
archain 1
P + T
COPI vesicle coat|Golgi apparatus|clathrin vesicle


125b




coat|intra-Golgi transport|intracellular protein







transport|intracellular protein







transport|membrane|retrograde transport, Golgi to







ER|transport


miR-
BC001719
ASB6
ankyrin repeat and
M + P
intracellular signaling cascade


125b


SOCS box-containing 6


miR-
AI478147
ATP10D
ATPase, Class V, type
P + T
ATP binding|ATPase activity|cation


125b


10D

transport|hydrolase activity|integral to







membrane|magnesium ion







binding|membrane|phospholipid-translocating ATPase







activity


miR-
NM_012069
ATP1B4
ATPase, (Na+)/K+
P + T
hydrogen ion transporter activity|integral to plasma


125b


transporting, beta 4

membrane|ion transport|membrane|potassium ion





polypeptide

transport|proton transport|sodium ion







transport|sodium:potassium-exchanging ATPase







activity


miR-
NM_005176
ATP5G2
ATP synthase, H+
M + P + T
ATP synthesis coupled proton transport|hydrogen-


125b


transporting,

transporting ATP synthase activity, rotational





mitochondrial F0

mechanism|hydrogen-transporting ATPase activity,





complex, subunit c

rotational mechanismlion transport|lipid





(subunit 9), isoform 2

binding|membrane|membrane







fraction|mitochondrion|proton transport|proton-







transporting ATP synthase complex (sensu







Eukaryota)|proton-transporting two-sector ATPase







complex|transporter activity


miR-
NM_001702
BAI1
brain-specific
M + P + T
G-protein coupled receptor


125b


angiogenesis inhibitor 1

activity|axonogenesis|brain-specific angiogenesis







inhibitor activity|cell adhesion|integral to plasma







membrane|intercellular junction|negative regulation of







cell proliferation|neuropeptide signaling







pathway|peripheral nervous system







development|plasma membrane|protein







binding|receptor activity|signal transduction


miR-
NM_001188
BAK1
BCL2-antagonist/killer 1
M + T
apoptotic mitochondrial changes|induction of


125b




apoptosis|integral to membrane|protein







heterodimerization activity|regulation of apoptosis


miR-
NM_013449
BAZ2A
bromodomain adjacent
P + T
DNA binding|chromatin remodeling|nucleolus


125b


to zinc finger domain,

organizer complex|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





2A

DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription regulator







activity


miR-
NM_004634
BRPF1
bromodomain and PHD
M + P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of


125b


finger containing, 1

transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_003458
BSN
bassoon (presynaptic
P + T
cytoskeleton|metal ion binding|nucleus|structural


125b


cytomatrix protein)

constituent of cytoskeleton|synapse|synaptic







transmission|synaptosome


miR-
NM_018108
C14orf130
hypothetical protein
P + T
ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity


125b


FLJ10483


miR-
AA025877
C20orf136
chromosome 20 open
P + T


125b


reading frame 136


miR-
AB054985
CACNB1
calcium channel,
M + P + T
calcium ion transport|ion transport|membrane


125b


voltage-dependent, beta

fraction|muscle contraction|voltage-gated calcium





1 subunit

channel activity|voltage-gated calcium channel







complex


miR-
NM_001224
CASP2
caspase 2, apoptosis-
P + T
anti-apoptosis|apoptotic program|caspase


125b


related cysteine

activity|caspase activity|caspase activity|cysteine-type





protease (neural

peptidase activity|enzyme binding|intracellular|protein





precursor cell

binding|proteolysis and peptidolysis|proteolysis and





expressed,

peptidolysis|regulation of apoptosis





developmentally down-





regulated 2)


miR-
NM_001755
CBFB
core-binding factor,
M + P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


125b


beta subunit

activity|nucleus|transcription coactivator







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
AV648364
CBX7
ESTs, Highly similar to
P + T
chromatin|chromatin assembly or


125b


potassium voltage-gated

disassembly|chromatin binding|chromatin





channel, Isk-related

modification|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





subfamily, gene 4;

DNA-dependent|transcription





potassium voltage-gated





channel-like protein,





Isk-related subfamily





[Homo sapiens]





[H. sapiens]


miR-
NM_001408
CELSR2
cadherin, EGF LAG
M + P + T
G-protein coupled receptor activity|calcium ion


125b


seven-pass G-type

binding|cell adhesion|development|homophilic cell





receptor 2 (flamingo

adhesion|integral to





homolog, Drosophila)

membrane|membrane|neuropeptide signaling







pathway|receptor activity|signal







transduction|structural molecule activity


miR-
NM_015955
CGI-27
C21orf19-like protein
P + T


125b


miR-
AF263462
CGN
cingulin
P + T
actin binding|biological_process unknown|motor


125b




activity|myosin|protein binding|tight junction


miR-
AF064491
CLIM2
LIM domain binding 1
P + T
LIM domain


125b




binding|development|development|negative regulation







of transcription, DNA-dependent|nucleus|transcription







cofactor activity|transcriptional repressor activity


miR-
AU152178
CMG2
capillary
P + T
integral to membrane|receptor activity


125b


morphogenesis protein 2


miR-
NM_004073
CNK
cytokine-inducible
P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


125b


kinase

phosphorylation|protein binding|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|regulation of cell







cycle|transferase activity


miR-
NM_020348
CNNM1
cyclin M1
M + P + T
fatty acid biosynthesis


125b


miR-
NM_022730
COPS7B
COP9 constitutive
M + P + T
signalosome complex


125b


photomorphogenic





homolog subunit 7B





(Arabidopsis)


miR-
NM_003389
CORO2A
coronin, actin binding
P + T
actin binding|glutamate-ammonia ligase


125b


protein, 2A

activity|glutamine biosynthesis|intracellular signaling







cascade|nitrogen compound metabolism|protein







binding


miR-
BF939649
CORO2B
coronin, actin binding
P + T
actin binding|actin cytoskeleton|actin cytoskeleton


125b


protein, 2B

organization and biogenesis|membrane


miR-
NM_007007
CPSF6
cleavage and
P + T
RNA binding|mRNA processing|nucleic acid


125b


polyadenylation

binding|nucleotide binding|nucleus





specific factor 6, 68 kDa


miR-
NM_004386
CSPG3
chondroitin sulfate
P + T
calcium ion binding|cell adhesion|cell


125b


proteoglycan 3

motility|hyaluronic acid binding|sugar binding





(neurocan)


miR-
NM_004393
DAG1
dystroglycan 1
M + P + T
actin cytoskeleton|calcium ion binding|extracellular


125b


(dystrophin-associated

matrix (sensu Metazoa)|integral to plasma





glycoprotein 1)

membrane|laminin receptor activity|membrane







fraction|muscle contraction|plasma membrane|protein







binding|protein complex assembly


miR-
NM_014764
DAZAP2
DAZ associated protein 2
P + T


125b


miR-
NM_030927
DC-
tetraspanin similar to
P + T
integral to membrane


125b

TM4F2
TM4SF9


miR-
NM_004082
DCTN1
dynactin 1 (p150, glued
M + P + T
cytoplasm|cytoskeleton|dynein complex|mitosis|motor


125b


homolog, Drosophila)

activity|neurogenesis


miR-
NM_030621
DICER1
Dicer1, Dcr-1 homolog
P + T
ATP binding|ATP-dependent helicase activity|RNA


125b


(Drosophila)

interference, targeting of mRNA for destruction|RNA







processing|double-stranded RNA







binding|endonuclease activity|hydrolase







activity|intracellular|ribonuclease III activity


miR-
U53506
DIO2
deiodinase,
P + T
integral to membrane|membrane|selenium


125b


iodothyronine, type II

binding|selenocysteine incorporation|thyroid hormone







generation|thyroxine 5′-deiodinase activity|thyroxine







5′-deiodinase activity


miR-
AL136139
dJ761I2.1

P + T


125b


miR-
AL357503
dJ899C14.1
Q9H4T4 like
P + T


125b


miR-
AL117482
DKFZP434C131
DKFZP434C131
P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


125b


protein

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|transferase







activity


miR-
AK023580
DKFZP434H0820
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


DKFZp434H0820


miR-
T16388
DKFZp564A176
hypothetical protein
P + T
development|integral to membrane|membrane|receptor


125b


DKFZp564A176

activity|semaphorin receptor activity


miR-
AL137517
DKFZp564O1278
hypothetical protein
P + T
integral to membrane


125b


DKFZp564O1278


miR-
BE781961
DKFZp762A2013
hypothetical protein
P + T
electron transport|electron transporter activity


125b


DKFZp762A2013


miR-
AB036931
DLL4
delta-like 4
M + P + T
Notch binding|Notch signaling pathway|cell


125b


(Drosophila)

differentiation|circulation|integral to







membrane|membrane|signal transduction


miR-
NM_012266
DNAJB5
DnaJ (Hsp40) homolog,
P + T
heat shock protein binding|protein folding|response to


125b


subfamily B, member 5

unfolded protein|unfolded protein binding


miR-
NM_005740
DNAL4
dynein, axonemal, light
P + T
ATPase activity, coupled|axonemal dynein


125b


polypeptide 4

complex|microtubule motor activity|microtubule-







based movement


miR-
BF593175
DOCK3
dedicator of cyto-
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase binding|guanyl-nucleotide


125b


kinesis 3

exchange factor activity


miR-
NM_006426
DPYSL4
dihydropyrimidinase-
P + T
hydrolase activity|neurogenesis


125b


like 4


miR-
NM_006465
DRIL2
dead ringer
P + T
DNA binding|biological_process unknown|nucleus


125b


(Drosophila)-like 2





(bright and dead ringer)


miR-
BC005047
DUSP6
dual specificity
P + T
MAP kinase phosphatase activity|cytoplasm|hydrolase


125b


phosphatase 6

activity|inactivation of MAPK|protein amino acid







dephosphorylation|protein serine/threonine







phosphatase activity|protein tyrosine phosphatase







activity|regulation of cell cycle|soluble fraction


miR-
NM_004423
DVL3
dishevelled, dsh
P + T
development|frizzled signaling pathway|heart


125b


homolog 3 (Drosophila)

development|intracellular|intracellular signaling







cascade|kinase activity|neurogenesis|protein







binding|signal transducer activity


miR-
NM_001949
E2F3
E2F transcription factor 3
P + T
nucleus|protein binding|regulation of cell


125b




cycle|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor complex|transcription







initiation from RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
AU149385
EAF1

Homo sapiens cDNA

P + T


125b


FLJ13155 fis, clone





NT2RP3003433,





mRNA sequence


miR-
NM_014674
EDEM
KIAA0212 gene
P + T
ER-associated protein catabolism|GTP binding|N-


125b


product

linked glycosylation|calcium ion binding|endoplasmic







reticulum|integral to endoplasmic reticulum







membrane|integral to membrane|mannosyl-







oligosaccharide 1,2-alpha-mannosidase







activity|membrane|protein binding|response to







unfolded protein


miR-
NM_001955
EDN1
endothelin 1
M + P + T
cell-cell signaling|extracellular space|hormone


125b




activity|pathogenesis|positive regulation of cell







proliferation|regulation of blood pressure|regulation of







vasoconstriction|signal transduction|soluble fraction


miR-
AI832074
EIF2C2
eukaryotic translation
M + P
cellular_component unknown|protein


125b


initiation factor 2C, 2

biosynthesis|translation initiation factor activity


miR-
AB044548
EIF4EBP1
eukaryotic translation
P + T
eukaryotic initiation factor 4E binding|negative


125b


initiation factor 4E

regulation of protein biosynthesis|negative regulation





binding protein 1

of translational initiation|regulation of translation


miR-
NM_020390
EIF5A2
eukaryotic translation
P + T
DNA binding|protein biosynthesis|translation


125b


initiation factor 5A2

initiation factor activity|translational initiation


miR-
NM_004438
EPHA4
EphA4
P + T
ATP binding|ephrin receptor activity|integral to


125b




plasma membrane|membrane|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|receptor activity|signal







transduction|transferase activity|transmembrane







receptor protein tyrosine kinase signaling pathway


miR-
NM_004451
ESRRA
estrogen-related
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


receptor alpha

dependent|steroid binding|steroid hormone receptor







activity|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_004907
ETR101
immediate early protein
P + T


125b


miR-
NM_005238
ETS1
v-ets erythroblastosis
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


125b


virus E26 oncogene

activity|immune response|negative regulation of cell





homolog 1 (avian)

proliferation|nucleus|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-
NM_001987
ETV6
ets variant gene 6 (TEL
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


oncogene)

dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_022763
FAD104
FAD104
P + T


125b


miR-
AF308300
FAPP2
phosphoinositol 4-
P + T


125b


phosphate adaptor





protein-2


miR-
NM_022976
FGFR2
fibroblast growth factor
M + P + T
ATP binding|cell growth|fibroblast growth factor


125b


receptor 2 (bacteria-

receptor activity|heparin binding|integral to





expressed kinase,

membrane|membrane|protein amino acid





keratinocyte growth

phosphorylation|protein amino acid





factor receptor,

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase





craniofacial dysostosis

activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|protein-





1, Crouzon syndrome,

tyrosine kinase activity|receptor activity|transferase





Pfeiffer syndrome,

activity





Jackson-Weiss





syndrome)


miR-
NM_004470
FKBP2
FK506 binding protein
P + T
FK506 binding|endoplasmic reticulum|isomerase


125b


2, 13 kDa

activity|peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase







activity|protein folding


miR-
AL160175
FKHL18
forkhead-like 18
P + T


125b


(Drosophila)


miR-
BF515132
FLJ00024
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


FLJ00024


miR-
BC002945
FLJ10101
hypothetical protein
M + P
GTP binding|protein transport|small GTPase mediated


125b


FLJ10101

signal transduction


miR-
NM_018243
FLJ10849
hypothetical protein
P + T
GTP binding|cell cycle|cytokinesis


125b


FLJ10849


miR-
NM_019084
FLJ10895
hypothetical protein
P + T
nucleus|regulation of cell cycle


125b


FLJ10895


miR-
NM_018320
FLJ11099
hypothetical protein
P + T
protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


125b


FLJ11099

complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_018375
FLJ11274
hypothetical protein
M + P + T
membrane|metal ion transport|metal ion transporter


125b


FLJ11274

activity


miR-
NM_024954
FLJ11807
hypothetical protein
P + T
protein modification


125b


FLJ11807


miR-
BF434995
FLJ14708
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


FLJ14708


miR-
NM_018992
FLJ20040
hypothetical protein
P + T
membrane|potassium ion transport|protein


125b


FLJ20040

binding|voltage-gated potassium channel







activity|voltage-gated potassium channel complex


miR-
NM_017911
FLJ20635
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


FLJ20635


miR-
NM_017936
FLJ2070
hypothetical protein
M + P + T
ATP synthesis coupled proton


125b


FLJ20707

transport|cytoplasm|hydrogen-transporting ATP







synthase activity, rotational mechanism|hydrogen-







transporting ATPase activity, rotational







mechanism|membrane|phosphate transport|proton-







transporting two-sector ATPase complex


miR-
NM_024789
FLJ22529
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


FLJ22529


miR-
AA721230
FLJ25604
hypothetical protein
P + T
guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activity|small


125b


FLJ25604

GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
AI677701
FLJ30829
hypothetical protein
P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleotide binding


125b


FLJ30829


miR-
NM_004475
FLOT2
flotillin 2
M + P + T
cell adhesion|epidermis development|flotillin


125b




complex|integral to membrane|plasma







membrane|protein binding


miR-
AA830884
FMR1
fragile X mental
M + T
mRNA binding|mRNA processing|mRNA-nucleus


125b


retardation 1

export|nucleoplasm|polysome|ribosome|soluble







fraction|transport


miR-
AF305083
FUT4
fucosyltransferase 4
P + T
Golgi apparatus|L-fucose catabolism|alpha(1,3)-


125b


(alpha (1,3)

fucosyltransferase activity|carbohydrate





fucosyltransferase,

metabolism|integral to





myeloid-specific)

membrane|membrane|membrane fraction|protein







amino acid glycosylation|transferase activity,







transferring glycosyl groups


miR-
X92762
G4.5
tafazzin
M + P + T
acyltransferase activity|heart development|integral to


125b


(cardiomyopathy,

membrane|metabolism|muscle contraction|muscle





dilated 3A (X-linked);

development





endocardial





fibroelastosis 2; Barth





syndrome)


miR-
NM_012296
GAB2
GRB2-associated
P + T


125b


binding protein 2


miR-
NM_015044
GGA2
golgi associated,
M + T
ADP-ribosylation factor binding|Golgi stack|Golgi


125b


gamma adaptin ear

trans face|clathrin coat of trans-Golgi network





containing, ARF

vesicle|intra-Golgi transport|intracellular protein





binding protein 2

transport|intracellular protein







transport|membrane|protein complex assembly|protein







transporter activity


miR-
AL049709
GGTL3
gamma-
M + P + T


125b


glutamyltransferase-like 3


miR-
NM_000165
GJA1
gap junction protein,
P + T
cell-cell signaling|connexon channel


125b


alpha 1, 43 kDa

activity|connexon complex|gap junction





(connexin 43)

assembly|heart development|integral to plasma







membrane|ion transporter activity|muscle







contraction|perception of sound|positive regulation of







I-kappaB kinase/NF-kappaB cascade|protein







binding|signal transducer activity|transport


miR-
NM_014905
GLS
glutaminase
P + T
glutaminase activity|glutamine catabolism|hydrolase


125b




activity|mitochondrion


miR-
NM_005113
GOLGA5
golgi autoantigen,
P + T
ATP binding|Golgi membrane|cell surface receptor


125b


golgin subfamily a, 5

linked signal transduction|integral to plasma







membrane|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein-tyrosine kinase activity


miR-
NM_001448
GPC4
glypican 4
M + P + T
cell proliferation|extracellular matrix (sensu


125b




Metazoa)|integral to plasma







membrane|membrane|morphogenesis


miR-
NM_005296
GPR23
G protein-coupled
M + T
G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling


125b


receptor 23

pathway|integral to plasma membrane|purinergic







nucleotide receptor activity, G-protein







coupled|receptor activity|rhodopsin-like receptor







activity|signal transduction


miR-
U66065
GRB10
growth factor receptor-
M + T
SH3/SH2 adaptor activity|cell-cell


125b


bound protein 10

signaling|cytoplasm|insulin receptor signaling







pathway|intracellular signaling cascade|plasma







membrane


miR-
NM_021643
GS3955
GS3955 protein
P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


125b




phosphorylation|protein kinase activity|transferase







activity


miR-
NM_019096
GTPBP2
GTP binding protein 2
M + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|protein


125b




biosynthesis|small GTPase mediated signal







transduction


miR-
U78181
hBNaC2
amiloride-sensitive
P + T
amiloride-sensitive sodium channel activity|integral to


125b


cation channel 2,

plasma membrane|ion channel activity|ion





neuronal

transport|membrane|response to pH|signal







transduction|sodium ion transport


miR-
NM_005477
HCN4
hyperpolarization
P + T
3′,5′-cAMP binding|cation channel activity|cation


125b


activated cyclic

transport|circulation|integral to plasma





nucleotide-gated

membrane|membrane|membrane fraction|muscle





potassium channel 4

contraction|nucleotide binding|potassium ion







transport|sodium ion transport|voltage-gated







potassium channel activity


miR-
NM_002112
HDC
histidine decarboxylase
P + T
amino acid metabolism|catecholamine


125b




biosynthesis|histidine decarboxylase activity|histidine







metabolism|lyase activity


miR-
U64317
HEF1
enhancer of
P + T
actin filament bundle formation|cell adhesion|


125b


filamentation 1 (cas-like

cytokinesis|cytoplasm|cytoskeleton|cytoskeleton





docking; Crk-associated

organization and biogenesis|integrin-mediated





substrate related)

signaling pathway|mitosis|nucleus|protein







binding|regulation of cell cycle|regulation of cell







growth|signal transduction|spindle


miR-
L38487
hERRa
estrogen-related
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


receptor alpha

dependent|steroid binding|steroid hormone receptor







activity|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
AB028943
HIC2
hypermethylated in
P + T
DNA binding|negative regulation of transcription,


125b


cancer 2

DNA-dependent|nucleus|protein C-terminus







binding|transcription|zinc ion binding


miR-
AL023584
HIVEP2
human
P + T


125b


immunodeficiency virus





type I enhancer binding





protein 2


miR-
AL023584
HIVEP2
human
P + T


125b


immunodeficiency virus





type I enhancer binding





protein 2


miR-
NM_005342
HMGB3
high-mobility group
P + T
DNA bending activity|DNA


125b


box 3

binding|chromatin|development|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent


miR-
AL031295
HMGCL;
lysophospholipase II
M + P + T


125b

HL


miR-
NM_004503
HOXC6
homeo box C6
P + T
development|development|nucleus|regulation of


125b




transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription corepressor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-
AA844682
HRD1
HRD1 protein
P + T
protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


125b




complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
AL136667
HSPC039
HSPC039 protein
P + T
integral to membrane


125b


miR-
AF245044
HT023
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


HT023


miR-
U13022
Ich-1
caspase 2, apoptosis-
P + T
anti-apoptosis|apoptotic program|caspase


125b


related cysteine

activity|caspase activity|caspase activity|cysteine-type





protease (neural

peptidase activity|enzyme binding|intracellular|protein





precursor cell

binding|proteolysis and peptidolysis|proteolysis and





expressed,

peptidolysis|regulation of apoptosis





developmentally down-





regulated 2)


miR-
NM_004513
IL16
interleukin 16
M + P + T
chemotaxis|cytokine activity|extracellular


125b


(lymphocyte

space|immune response|protein binding|sensory





chemoattractant factor)

perception


miR-
NM_002460
IRF4
interferon regulatory
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor activity|T-cell


125b


factor 4

activation|T-cell







activation|nucleus|nucleus|nucleus|positive regulation







of interleukin-10 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-10 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-13 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-13 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-2 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-2 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-4 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







interleukin-4 biosynthesis|positive regulation of







transcription|positive regulation of







transcription|regulation of T-helper cell







differentiation|regulation of T-helper cell







differentiation|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription







factor binding|transcription factor







binding|transcriptional activator







activity|transcriptional activator activity


miR-
NM_002207
ITGA9
integrin, alpha 9
P + T
cell-matrix adhesion|integral to membrane|integrin


125b




complex|integrin-mediated signaling pathway|protein







binding|receptor activity


miR-
NM_000212
ITGB3
integrin, beta 3 (platelet
P + T
blood coagulation|cell-matrix adhesion|integrin


125b


glycoprotein IIIa,

complex|integrin-mediated signaling pathway|protein





antigen CD61)

binding|receptor activity


miR-
NM_021991
JUP
junction plakoglobin
P + T
cell adhesion|cell adhesion|cytoplasm|cytoskeletal


125b




protein binding|cytoskeleton|cytoskeleton|membrane







fraction|mitotic chromosome condensation|protein







binding|soluble fraction|structural molecule activity


miR-
AF032897
KCNH7
potassium voltage-gated
P + T
cation transport|integral to


125b


channel, subfamily H

membrane|membrane|potassium ion





(eag-related), member 7

transport|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|signal transducer activity|signal







transduction|voltage-gated potassium channel activity


miR-
NM_002252
KCNS3
potassium voltage-gated
M + P + T
cation transport|delayed rectifier potassium channel


125b


channel, delayed-

activity|membrane|membrane fraction|potassium





rectifier, subfamily S,

channel regulator activity|potassium ion





member 3

transport|protein binding|voltage-gated potassium







channel complex


miR-
NM_014735
KIAA0215
KIAA0215 gene
P + T
DNA binding|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


product

dependent


miR-
NM_015288
KIAA0239
KIAA0239 protein
P + T
DNA binding|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b




dependent


miR-
D87469
KIAA0279
cadherin, EGF LAG
M + P + T
G-protein coupled receptor activity|calcium ion


125b


seven-pass G-type

binding|cell adhesion|development|homophilic cell





receptor 2 (flamingo

adhesion|integral to





homolog, Drosophila)

membrane|membrane|neuropeptide signaling







pathway|receptor activity|signal







transduction|structural molecule activity


miR-
AB002356
KIAA0358
MAP-kinase activating
P + T
cell surface receptor linked signal


125b


death domain

transduction|cytoplasm|death receptor binding|kinase







activity|plasma membrane|protein kinase activator







activity


miR-
NM_014871
KIAA0710
KIAA0710 gene
P + T
cysteine-type endopeptidase activity|exonuclease


125b


product

activity|nucleus|ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin thiolesterase







activity|ubiquitin-dependent protein catabolism


miR-
AB 018333
KIAA0790
KIAA0790 protein
P + T
cell cycle|negative regulation of cell cycle


125b


miR-
NM_014912
KIAA0940
KIAA0940 protein
P + T
nucleic acid binding


125b


miR-
AB028957
KIAA1034
KIAA1034 protein
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


125b




DNA-dependent|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_014901
KIAA1100
KIAA1100 protein
M + P + T
protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


125b




complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
AB033016
KIAA1190
hypothetical protein
P + T
DNA binding|nucleic acid binding|nucleus|protein


125b


KIAA1190

binding|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|zinc ion binding


miR-
AA056548
KIAA1268
KIAA1268 protein
P + T
NAD + ADP-ribosyltransferase


125b




activity|nucleus|protein amino acid ADP-ribosylation


miR-
BE670098
KIAA1594
KIAA1594 protein
M + P + T
cysteine-type endopeptidase activity|ubiquitin


125b




cycle|ubiquitin thiolesterase activity|ubiquitin-







dependent protein catabolism


miR-
AU157109
KIAA1598
KIAA1598 protein
P + T


125b


miR-
AA772278
KIAA1673
KIAA1673
P + T


125b


miR-
NM_015995
KLF13
Kruppel-like factor 13
P + T
DNA binding|RNA polymerase II transcription factor


125b




activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription from RNA







polymerase II promoter|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_016531
KLF3
Kruppel-like factor 3
P + T
development|negative regulation of transcription from


125b


(basic)

RNA polymerase II promoter|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
BE892574
LACTB
lactamase, beta
P + T
hydrolase activity|integral to membrane|response to


125b




antibiotic


miR-
BE566136
LBP-32
LBP protein 32
P + T


125b


miR-
NM_024090
LCE
long-chain fatty-acyl
P + T
integral to membrane


125b


elongase


miR-
NM_003893
LDB1
LIM domain binding 1
P + T
LIM domain


125b




binding|development|development|negative regulation







of transcription, DNA-dependent|nucleus|transcription







cofactor activity|transcriptional repressor activity


miR-
U94354
LFNG
lunatic fringe homolog
M + T
Golgi apparatus|development|extracellular


125b


(Drosophila)

region|integral to







membrane|membrane|organogenesis|transferase







activity, transferring glycosyl groups


miR-
NM_002310
LIFR
leukemia inhibitory
M + P + T
cell surface receptor linked signal


125b


factor receptor

transduction|integral to plasma membrane|leukemia







inhibitory factor receptor activity|membrane|receptor







activity


miR-
NM_016339
Link-
Link guanine nucleotide
P + T
G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling


125b

GEFII
exchange factor II

pathway|guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor







activity|membrane fraction|neurogenesis|small







GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
NM_005575
LNPEP
leucyl/cystinyl
P + T
aminopeptidase activity|cell-cell signaling|integral to


125b


aminopeptidase

plasma membrane|membrane alanyl aminopeptidase







activity|metallopeptidase activity|plasma







membrane|pregnancy|proteolysis and peptidolysis|zinc







ion binding


miR-
AL031186
LOC129080
putative emu1
P + T


125b


miR-
AI884701
LOC221002
CG4853 gene product
M + P
guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activity|small


125b




GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
AI953847
LOC255488

Homo sapiens mRNA

P + T
electron transport|electron transporter activity|integral


125b


full length insert cDNA

to membrane|iron ion binding|ligase activity|protein





clone EUROIMAGE

binding|protein ubiquitination during ubiquitin-





186647, mRNA

dependent protein catabolism|ubiquitin ligase





sequence

complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_015899
LOC51054
putative glycolipid
P + T


125b


transfer protein


miR-
AA209239
LOC57406
lipase protein
P + T
aromatic compound metabolism|hydrolase


125b




activity|response to toxin|xenobiotic metabolism


miR-
NM_005576
LOXL1
lysyl oxidase-like 1
M + P + T
copper ion binding|electron transporter


125b




activity|extracellular region|oxidoreductase







activity|protein modification|protein-lysine 6-oxidase







activity


miR-
AA584297
LRP4
low density lipoprotein
M + T
calcium ion binding|endocytosis|integral to


125b


receptor-related protein 4

membrane|membrane|receptor activity


miR-
NM_007260
LYPLA2
lysophospholipase II
M + P + T
fatty acid metabolism|hydrolase activity|lipid


125b




metabolism


miR-
NM_004901
LYSAL1
lysosomal apyrase-like 1
P + T
Golgi apparatus|UDP catabolism|apyrase


125b




activity|hydrolase activity|integral to Golgi







membrane|integral to membrane|lysosome|magnesium







ion binding|nucleobase, nucleoside, nucleotide and







nucleic acid metabolism|uridine-diphosphatase







activity|vacuolar membrane


miR-
NM_002355
M6PR
mannose-6-phosphate
M + P + T
endosome to lysosome transport|integral to plasma


125b


receptor (cation

membrane|lysosome|receptor mediated





dependent)

endocytosis|transmembrane receptor







activity|transport|transporter activity


miR-
AB002356
MADD
MAP-kinase activating
P + T
cell surface receptor linked signal


125b


death domain

transduction|cytoplasm|death receptor binding|kinase







activity|plasma membrane|protein kinase activator







activity


miR-
NM_016219
MAN1B1
mannosidase, alpha,
P + T
N-linked glycosylation|N-linked


125b


class 1B, member 1

glycosylation|calcium ion binding|calcium ion







binding|carbohydrate metabolism|endoplasmic







reticulum|hydrolase activity, acting on glycosyl







bonds|integral to membrane|mannosyl-







oligosaccharide 1,2-alpha-mannosidase







activity|mannosyl-oligosaccharide 1,2-alpha-







mannosidase activity|membrane|membrane







fraction|oligosaccharide metabolism


miR-
NM_002446
MAP3K10
mitogen-activated
P + T
ATP binding|JUN kinase kinase kinase


125b


protein kinase kinase

activity|activation of





kinase 10

JNK|autophosphorylation|induction of







apoptosis|protein homodimerization activity|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein-tyrosine







kinase activity|signal transduction|transferase activity


miR-
NM_002419
MAP3K11
mitogen-activated
M + P + T
ATP binding|G1 phase of mitotic cell cycle|JUN


125b


protein kinase kinase

kinase kinase kinase activity|activation of





kinase 11

JNK|autophosphorylation|cell







proliferation|centrosome|microtubule|microtubule-







based process|protein homodimerization







activity|protein oligomerization|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein-tyrosine







kinase activity|transferase activity


miR-
Z25432
MAPK14
mitogen-activated
P + T
ATP binding|MAP kinase activity|MAP kinase kinase


125b


protein kinase 14

activity|MP kinase activity|antimicrobial humoral







response (sensu Vertebrata)|cell motility|cell surface







receptor linked signal







transduction|chemotaxis|cytoplasm|nucleus|protein







amino acid phosphorylation|protein kinase







cascade|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|response to







stress|transferase activity


miR-
NM_018650
MARK1
MAP/microtubule
P + T
ATP binding|cytoplasm|cytoskeleton|cytoskeleton


125b


affinity-regulating

organization and biogenesis|magnesium ion





kinase 1

binding|microtubule cytoskeleton|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein kinase cascade|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_001879
MASP1
mannan-binding lectin
P + T
calcium ion binding|chymotrypsin


125b


serine protease 1

activity|complement activation|complement





(C4/C2 activating

activation, classical pathway|extracellular





component of Ra-

region|immune response|peptidase activity|proteolysis





reactive factor)

and peptidolysis|trypsin activity


miR-
NM_005911
MAT2A
methionine
P + T
ATP binding|magnesium ion binding|methionine


125b


adenosyltransferase II,

adenosyltransferase activity|one-carbon compound





alpha

metabolism|transferase activity


miR-
NM_005920
MEF2D
MADS box
P + T
muscle development|nucleus|regulation of


125b


transcription enhancer

transcription, DNA-





factor 2, polypeptide D

dependent|transcription|transcription coactivator





(myocyte enhancer

activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from





factor 2D)

RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_020149
MEIS2
Meis1, myeloid
M + P
negative regulation of transcription from RNA


125b


ecotropic viral

polymerase II promoter|nucleus|regulation of





integration site 1

transcription, DNA-dependent|specific RNA





homolog 2 (mouse)

polymerase II transcription factor







activity|transcription corepressor activity|transcription







factor activity|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_017927
MEN1
mitofusin 1
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|hydrolase


125b




activity|integral to membrane|mitochondrial







fusion|mitochondrial outer membrane|mitochondrion


miR-
AI139252
MGC16063
ribosomal protein L35a
P + T
JAK-STAT cascadelacute-phase response|calcium ion


125b




binding|cell







motility|cytoplasm|hematopoietin/interferon-class







(D200-domain) cytokine receptor signal transducer







activity|intracellular signaling cascade|negative







regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|neurogenesis|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transducer







activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-
AI862120
MGC21981
hypothetical protein
P + T
membrane


125b


MGC21981


miR-
AL515061
MGC24302
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


MGC24302


miR-
BE618656
MGC2541
similar to RIKEN
M + P + T


125b


cDNA 2610030J16





gene


miR-
BC005842
MGC2705
hypothetical protein
P + T


125b


MGC2705


miR-
NM_024293
MGC3035
hypothetical protein
M + P


125b


MGC3035


miR-
NM_017572
MKNK2
MAP kinase-interacting
P + T
ATP binding|ATP binding|cell surface receptor linked


125b


serine/threonine kinase 2

signal transduction|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein kinase cascade|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein-tyrosine







kinase activity|regulation of translation|response to







stress|transferase activity


miR-
NM_005439
MLF2
myeloid leukemia factor 2
P + T
defense response|nucleus


125b


miR-
NM_007359
MLN51
MLN51 protein
P + T
mRNA processing|mRNA-nucleus


125b




export|molecular_function unknown|nucleus|transport


miR-
NM_002442
MSI1
musashi homolog 1
M + P + T
RNA binding|neurogenesis|nucleotide binding|nucleus


125b


(Drosophila)


miR-
NM_021090
MTMR3
myotubularin related
M + P + T
cytoplasm|hydrolase activity|inositol or


125b


protein 3

phosphatidylinositol phosphatase







activity|membrane|membrane fraction|phospholipid







dephosphorylation|protein amino acid







dephosphorylation|protein serine/threonine







phosphatase activity|protein tyrosine phosphatase







activity|protein tyrosine/serine/threonine phosphatase







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
AK024501
MXD4
MAX dimerization
M + P + T
DNA binding|negative regulation of cell


125b


protein 4

proliferation|negative regulation of transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter|nucleus|protein







binding|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription corepressor







activity


miR-
AB020642
MYT1
myelin transcription
M + P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


factor 1

dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_004540
NCAM2
neural cell adhesion
P + T
cell adhesion|integral to membrane|membrane|neuron


125b


molecule 2

adhesion|plasma membrane|protein binding


miR-
NM_012338
NET-2
transmembrane 4
P + T
integral to membrane|membrane fraction


125b


superfamily member





tetraspan NET-2


miR-
U84246
NEU1
sialidase 1 (lysosomal
P + T
carbohydrate metabolism|exo-alpha-sialidase


125b


sialidase)

activity|hydrolase activity, acting on glycosyl







bonds|lysosome


miR-
AI824012
NRIP1
nuclear receptor
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


interacting protein 1

dependent|transcription|transcription coactivator







activity


miR-
D81048
NRM
nurim (nuclear envelope
P + T


125b


membrane protein)


miR-
BC001794
NUMBL
numb homolog
P + T
neurogenesis


125b


(Drosophila)-like


miR-
AB020713
NUP210
nucleoporin 210
P + T
development|nucleus


125b


miR-
NM_002537
OAZ2
ornithine decarboxylase
M + P + T
ornithine decarboxylase inhibitor activity|polyamine


125b


antizyme 2

metabolism


miR-
NM_024586
OSBPL9
oxysterol binding
P + T
lipid transport|steroid metabolism


125b


protein-like 9


miR-
U64661
PABP
ESTs, Highly similar to
P + T


125b


PAB1_HUMAN





Polyadenylate-binding





protein 1 (Poly(A)-





binding protein 1)





(PABP 1) (PABP1)





[H. sapiens]


miR-
AK000003
PCQAP
PC2 (positive cofactor
P + T


125b


2, multiprotein





complex) glutamine/Q-





rich-associated protein


miR-
NM_004716
PCSK7
proprotein convertase
M + P + T
integral to Golgi membrane|integral to


125b


subtilisin/kexin type 7

membrane|peptidase activity|peptidase activity|peptide







hormone processing|proteolysis and







peptidolysis|subtilase activity


miR-
NM_006201
PCTK1
PCTAIRE protein
M + P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


125b


kinase 1

phosphorylation|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|regulation of cell cycle|transferase activity


miR-
NM_021213
PCTP
phosphatidylcholine
M + P + T
cytosol|lipid binding|lipid


125b


transfer protein

transport|phosphatidylcholine transporter activity


miR-
NM_021255
PELI2
pellino homolog 2
M + P + T


125b


(Drosophila)


miR-
NM_002646
PIK3C2B
phosphoinositide-3-
P + T
inositol or phosphatidylinositol kinase


125b


kinase, class 2, beta

activity|intracellular signaling





polypeptide

cascade|microsome (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase







activity|phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 3-kinase







activity|phosphoinositide 3-kinase complex|plasma







membrane|transferase activity


miR-
NM_003628
PKP4
plakophilin 4
P + T
cell adhesion|cytoskeleton|intercellular


125b




junction|protein binding|structural molecule activity


miR-
NM_006718
PLAGL1
pleiomorphic adenoma
P + T
DNA binding|cell cycle arrest|induction of


125b


gene-like 1

apoptosis|nucleic acid binding|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription|zinc ion







binding


miR-
AI457120
PPAT
phosphoribosyl
P + T
amidophosphoribosyltransferase activity|glutamine


125b


pyrophosphate

metabolism|magnesium ion





amidotransferase

binding|metabolism|nucleoside metabolism|purine







base biosynthesis|purine nucleotide







biosynthesis|transferase activity, transferring glycosyl







groups


miR-
NM_002719
PPP2R5C
protein phosphatase 2,
P + T
hydrolase activity|nucleus|phosphoprotein


125b


regulatory subunit B

phosphatase activity|protein phosphatase type 2A





(B56), gamma isoform

complex|protein phosphatase type 2A complex|protein







phosphatase type 2A regulator activity|protein







phosphatase type 2A regulator activity|signal







transduction|signal transduction


miR-
AL022067
PRDM1
PR domain containing
P + T


125b


1, with ZNF domain


miR-
U23736
PRDM2
PR domain containing
P + T
DNA binding|metal ion


125b


2, with ZNF domain

binding|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription factor activity|transcription







regulator activity|zinc ion binding|zinc ion binding


miR-
AF083033
PRKRA
protein kinase,
P + T
double-stranded RNA binding|enzyme activator


125b


interferon-inducible

activity|immune response|intracellular|kinase





double stranded RNA

activity|negative regulation of cell





dependent activator

proliferation|response to virus|signal transducer







activity|signal transduction


miR-
NM_014369
PTPN18
protein tyrosine
P + T
hydrolase activity|non-membrane spanning protein


125b


phosphatase, non-

tyrosine phosphatase activity|protein amino acid





receptor type 18 (brain-

dephosphorylation|protein amino acid





derived)

dephosphorylation|protein tyrosine phosphatase







activity


miR-
AI762627
PTPRF
protein tyrosine
P + T
cell adhesion|hydrolase activity|integral to


125b


phosphatase, receptor

membrane|integral to plasma membrane|protein





type, F

amino acid dephosphorylation|protein binding|protein







tyrosine phosphatase activity|receptor







activity|transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine







phosphatase activity|transmembrane receptor protein







tyrosine phosphatase signaling pathway


miR-
NM_002840
PTPRF
protein tyrosine
P + T
cell adhesion|hydrolase activity|integral to


125b


phosphatase, receptor

membrane|integral to plasma membrane|protein





type, F

amino acid dephosphorylation|protein binding|protein







tyrosine phosphatase activity|receptor







activity|transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine







phosphatase activity|transmembrane receptor protein







tyrosine phosphatase signaling pathway


miR-
AF142419
QKI
homolog of mouse
P + T


125b


quaking QKI (KH





domain RNA binding





protein)


miR-
NM_004283
RAB3D
RAB3D, member RAS
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|exocytosis|hemocyte


125b


oncogene family

development|protein transport|small GTPase mediated







signal transduction


miR-
BC002510
RAB6B
RAB6B, member RAS
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|Golgi


125b


oncogene family

apparatus|intracellular protein transport|retrograde







transport, Golgi to ER|small GTPase mediated signal







transduction


miR-
AK022662
RASAL2
RAS protein activator
P + T
GTPase activator activity|Ras GTPase activator


125b


like 2

activity|signal transduction


miR-
NM_004841
RASAL2
RAS protein activator
P + T
GTPase activator activity|Ras GTPase activator


125b


like 2

activity|signal transduction


miR-
NM_016090
RBM7
RNA binding motif
P + T
RNA binding|meiosis|nucleic acid binding|nucleotide


125b


protein 7

binding


miR-
NM_006268
REQ
requiem, apoptosis
M + P + T
DNA binding|apoptosis|induction of apoptosis by


125b


response zinc finger

extracellular signals|nucleus|protein





gene

ubiquitination|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|ubiquitin ligase







complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_000449
RFX5
regulatory factor X, 5
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


(influences HLA class

dependent|transcription|transcription coactivator





II expression)

activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_003721
RFXANK
regulatory factor X-
P + T
humoral immune response|nucleus|regulation of


125b


associated ankyrin-

transcription, DNA-





containing protein

dependent|transcription|transcription coactivator







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_014746
RNF144
likely ortholog of
P + T
nucleus|protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


125b


mouse ubiquitin

complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion





conjugating enzyme 7

binding





interacting protein 4


miR-
NM_014771
RNF40
ring finger protein 40
M + P + T
protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


125b




complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
AL109955
RNPC1
RNA-binding region
P + T


125b


(RNP1, RRM)





containing 1


miR-
AF116627
RPL29
ribosomal protein L29
M + T


125b


miR-
NM_002953
RPS6KA1
ribosomal protein S6
M + P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


125b


kinase, 90 kDa,

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase





polypeptide 1

activity|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|signal







transduction|transferase activity


miR-
NM_000332
SCA1
spinocerebellar ataxia 1
P + T
RNA binding|cytoplasm|nucleus


125b


(olivopontocerebellar





ataxia 1, autosomal





dominant, ataxin 1)


miR-
NM_012429
SEC14L2
SEC14-like 2
P + T
cytoplasm|intracellular protein


125b


(S. cerevisiae)

transport|membrane|nucleus|phospholipid







binding|positive regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|protein carrier activity|regulation of







cholesterol biosynthesis|transcription|transcriptional







activator activity|transport|vitamin E binding


miR-
NM_005065
SEL1L
sel-1 suppressor of lin-
P + T
catalytic activity|integral to membrane


125b


12-like (C. elegans)


miR-
NM_017789
SEMA4C
sema domain,
M + P + T
cell differentiation|integral to


125b


immunoglobulin

membrane|membrane|neurogenesis|receptor activity





domain (Ig),





transmembrane domain





(TM) and short





cytoplasmic domain,





(semaphorin) 4C


miR-
NM_006378
SEMA4D
sema domain,
P + T
anti-apoptosis|cell adhesion|cell


125b


immunoglobulin

differentiation|immune response|integral to





domain (Ig),

membrane|membrane|neurogenesis|receptor activity





transmembrane domain





(TM) and short





cytoplasmic domain,





(semaphorin) 4D


miR-
BE622841
SENP2
sentrin-specific protease
M + P


125b


miR-
NM_003011
SET
SET translocation
M + T
DNA replication|endoplasmic reticulum|histone


125b


(myeloid leukemia-

binding|negative regulation of histone





associated)

acetylation|nucleocytoplasmic transport|nucleosome







assembly|nucleosome disassembly|nucleus|perinuclear







region|protein phosphatase inhibitor activity|protein







phosphatase type 2A regulator activity


miR-
NM_006275
SFRS6
splicing factor,
P + T
RNA binding|mRNA splice site selection|nuclear


125b


arginine/serine-rich 6

mRNA splicing, via spliceosome|nucleotide







binding|nucleus


miR-
AF015043
SH3BP4
SH3-domain binding
P + T
cell cycle|endocytosis|nucleus|signal transducer


125b


protein 4

activity


miR-
NM_016538
SIRT7
sirtuin silent mating
P + T
DNA binding|chromatin silencing|chromatin silencing


125b


type information

complex|hydrolase activity|regulation of transcription,





regulation 2 homolog 7

DNA-dependent





(S. cerevisiae)


miR-
NM_020309
SLC17A7
solute carrier family 17
P + T
integral to membrane|phosphate transport|sodium-


125b


(sodium-dependent

dependent phosphate transporter





inorganic phosphate

activity|transport|transporter activity





cotransporter), member 7


miR-
NM_013272
SLC21A11
solute carrier family 21
P + T
integral to membrane|ion


125b


(organic anion

transport|membrane|transporter activity





transporter), member 11


miR-
AK000722
SLC27A4
solute carrier family 27
P + T
catalytic activity|fatty acid transport|fatty acid


125b


(fatty acid transporter),

transporter activity|ligase activity|lipid





member 4

metabolism|lipid transport|metabolism


miR-
NM_003759
SLC4A4
solute carrier family 4,
P + T
anion transport|inorganic anion exchanger


125b


sodium bicarbonate

activity|integral to membrane|integral to plasma





cotransporter, member 4

membrane|membrane|sodium:bicarbonate symporter







activity|transport


miR-
NM_003045
SLC7A1
solute carrier family 7
P + T
amino acid metabolism|amino acid permease


125b


(cationic amino acid

activity|amino acid transport|basic amino acid





transporter, y+ system),

transporter activity|integral to plasma





member 1

membrane|membrane|receptor activity|transport


miR-
NM_003983
SLC7A6
solute carrier family 7
P + T
amino acid metabolism|amino acid transport|amino


125b


(cationic amino acid

acid-polyamine transporter activity|integral to plasma





transporter, y+ system),

membrane|plasma membrane|protein complex





member 6

assembly|transport


miR-
AF113019
SMARCD2
SWI/SNF related,
M + P + T
chromatin remodeling|nucleoplasm|regulation of


125b


matrix associated, actin

transcription from RNA polymerase II





dependent regulator of

promoter|transcription|transcription coactivator





chromatin, subfamily d,

activity





member 2


miR-
NM_005985
SNAI1
snail homolog 1
P + T
DNA binding|cartilage


125b


(Drosophila)

condensation|development|neurogenesis|nucleus|zinc







ion binding


miR-
AB037750
SORCS2
VPS10 domain receptor
P + T
integral to membrane|intracellular protein


125b


protein

transport|membrane|membrane|neuropeptide receptor







activity|neuropeptide signaling pathway|protein







binding|protein transporter activity|sugar binding


miR-
BE742268
SORT1
sortilin 1
P + T
endocytosis|endosome|integral to membrane|integral


125b




to membrane|intracellular protein







transport|membrane|neurotensin receptor activity, G-







protein coupled|protein transporter activity|receptor







activity


miR-
AI360875
SOX11
SRY (sex determining
M + T
DNA binding|neurogenesis|nucleus|regulation of


125b


region Y)-box 11

transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription


miR-
AU121035
SP1
Sp1 transcription factor
P + T
DNA binding|RNA polymerase II transcription factor


125b




activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcriptional activator







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_003131
SRF
serum response factor
M + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


125b


(c-fos serum response

activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription from RNA





element-binding

polymerase II promoter|signal





transcription factor)

transduction|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_005637
SS18
synovial sarcoma
P + T
nucleus


125b


translocation,





chromosome 18


miR-
AF343880
SSX2
synovial sarcoma, X
P + T
nucleus


125b


breakpoint 2


miR-
NM_014682
ST18
suppression of
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


tumorigenicity 18

dependent|transcription factor activity





(breast carcinoma) (zinc





finger protein)


miR-
AA128023
STARD13
START domain
P + T


125b


containing 13


miR-
BC000627
STAT3
signal transducer and
P + T
JAK-STAT cascade|acute-phase response|calcium ion


125b


activator of

binding|cell





transcription 3 (acute-

motility|cytoplasm|hematopoietin/interferon-class





phase response factor)

(D200-domain) cytokine receptor signal transducer







activity|intracellular signaling cascade|negative







regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|neurogenesis|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transducer







activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_003155
STC1
stanniocalcin 1
P + T
calcium ion homeostasis|cell surface receptor linked


125b




signal transduction|cell-cell signaling|extracellular







region|hormone activity|response to nutrients


miR-
NM_003173
SUV39H1
suppressor of
P + T
DNA replication and chromosome cycle|S-


125b


variegation 3-9

adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferase





homolog 1 (Drosophila)

activity|chromatin|chromatin assembly or







disassembly|chromatin binding|chromatin







modification|condensed nuclear chromosome|histone







lysine N-methyltransferase activity (H3-K9







specific)|histone-lysine N-methyltransferase







activity|methyltransferase







activity|nucleus|nucleus|protein binding|transferase







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
AW139618
SYN2
synapsin II
P + T
neurotransmitter secretion|synapse|synaptic


125b




transmission|synaptic vesicle


miR-
R60550
TAF5L
TAF5-like RNA
M + P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


polymerase II,

dependent|transcription factor activity|transcription





p300/CBP-associated

from RNA polymerase II promoter





factor (PCAF)-





associated factor,





65 kDa


miR-
AF220509
TAF9L
TAF9-like RNA
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


125b


polymerase II, TATA

DNA-dependent|transcription factor TFIID





box binding protein

complex|transcription initiation





(TBP)-associated factor,





31 kDa


miR-
NM_000116
TAZ
tafazzin
M + P + T
acyltransferase activity|heart development|integral to


125b


(cardiomyopathy,

membrane|metabolism|muscle contraction|muscle





dilated 3A (X-linked);

development





endocardial





fibroelastosis 2; Barth





syndrome)


miR-
NM_018488
TBX4
T-box 4
P + T
development|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


125b




DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity


miR-
NM_012249
TC10
ras-like protein TC10
M + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|plasma membrane|small


125b




GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
BG387172
TEAD2
TEA domain family
P + T
nucleus|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b


member 2

dependent|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-
U06935
TEF
thyrotrophic embryonic
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


125b


factor

activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription from RNA







polymerase II promoter|rhythmic







process|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_006464
TGOLN2
trans-golgi network
P + T
Golgi trans face|integral to membrane|transport


125b


protein 2

vesicle


miR-
BE219311
TIMM22
translocase of inner
P + T
integral to membrane|mitochondrial inner


125b


mitochondrial

membrane|mitochondrion|protein transport|protein





membrane 22 homolog

transporter activity





(yeast)


miR-
NM_003326
TNFSF4
tumor necrosis factor
P + T
cell-cell signaling|immune response|integral to plasma


125b


(ligand) superfamily,

membrane|membrane|positive regulation of cell





member 4 (tax-

proliferation|signal transduction|tumor necrosis factor





transcriptionally

receptor binding





activated glycoprotein





1, 34 kDa)


miR-
AA873275
TOR2A
torsin family 2, member A
P + T
ATP binding|GTP cyclohydrolase I


125b




activity|biosynthesis|chaperone cofactor dependent







protein folding|endoplasmic reticulum|nucleoside-







triphosphatase activity|nucleotide binding


miR-
AW341649
TP53INP1
tumor protein p53
M + P + T
apoptosis|nucleus


125b


inducible nuclear





protein 1


miR-
NM_014112
TRPS1
trichorhinophalangeal
P + T
NLS-bearing substrate-nucleus


125b


syndrome I

import|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|skeletal







development|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_001070
TUBG1
tubulin, gamma 1
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|centrosome|condensed


125b




nuclear chromosome|gamma-tubulin complex|meiotic







spindle organization and







biogenesis|microtubule|microtubule







nucleation|microtubule-based movement|mitotic







spindle organization and biogenesis|polar







microtubule|protein binding|protein







polymerization|spindle pole body|structural







constituent of cytoskeleton


miR-
NM_003330
TXNRD1
thioredoxin reductase 1
P + T
FAD binding|cell redox


125b




homeostasis|cytoplasm|disulfide oxidoreductase







activity|electron transport|electron transporter







activity|oxidoreductase activity, acting on NADH or







NADPH, disulfide as acceptor|signal







transduction|thioredoxin-disulfide reductase activity


miR-
BC004862
UBE2R2
ubiquitin-conjugating
P + T
ligase activity|ubiquitin conjugating enzyme


125b


enzyme E2R 2

activity|ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin-protein ligase







activity


miR-
NM_003728
UNC5C
unc-5 homolog B
P + T
apoptosis|axon guidance|brain


125b


(C. elegans)

development|development|integral to membrane |netrin







receptor activity|protein binding|receptor







activity|signal transduction


miR-
NM_003369
UVRAG
UV radiation resistance
P + T
DNA repair|cytoplasm


125b


associated gene


miR-
AF195514
VPS4B
vacuolar protein sorting
M + P + T
ATP binding|ATPase activity,


125b


4B (yeast)

coupled|membrane|membrane fusion|nucleoside-







triphosphatase activity|nucleotide binding|peroxisome







organization and biogenesis|protein binding|regulation







of transcription, DNA-dependent


miR-
R51061
VTS58635
mitogen-activated
P + T
GTP binding|small GTPase mediated signal


125b


protein kinase kinase

transduction





kinase kinase 1


miR-
NM_004184
WARS
tryptophanyl-tRNA
M + T
ATP binding|cytoplasm|ligase activity|negative


125b


synthetase

regulation of cell proliferation|protein







biosynthesis|soluble fraction|tryptophan-tRNA ligase







activity|tryptophanyl-tRNA







aminoacylation|tryptophanyl-tRNA aminoacylation


miR-
NM_005433
YES1
v-yes-1 Yamaguchi
P + T
ATP binding|intracellular signaling cascade|protein


125b


sarcoma viral oncogene

amino acid phosphorylation|protein-tyrosine kinase





homolog 1

activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_017740
ZDHHC7
zinc finger, DHHC
P + T
integral to membrane|metal ion binding


125b


domain containing 7


miR-
BF525395
ZFP385
likely ortholog of
M + P + T
DNA binding|nucleic acid binding|nucleus|regulation


125b


mouse zinc finger

of transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription|zinc





protein 385

ion binding


miR-
NM_007345
ZNF236
zinc finger protein 236
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


125b




dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_012482
ZNF281
zinc finger protein 281
M + P + T
DNA binding|DNA-directed RNA polymerase II, core


125b




complex|negative regulation of transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|specific RNA







polymerase II transcription factor







activity|transcription|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_003427
ZNF76
zinc finger protein 76
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription from


125b


(expressed in testis)

RNA polymerase II promoter|regulation of







transcription from RNA polymerase III







promoter|transcription|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_022465
ZNFN1A4
zinc finger protein,
M + P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|transcription factor


125b


subfamily 1A, 4 (Eos)

activity|transcriptional repressor activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_005502
ABCA1
ATP-binding cassette,
P + T
ATP binding|ATP binding|ATPase activity|anion


145


sub-family A (ABC1),

transporter activity|cholesterol metabolism|integral to





member 1

plasma membrane|lipid metabolism|membrane







fraction|nucleotide binding|steroid metabolism|sterol







transporter activity|transport|transport


miR-
AL527773
ABR
active BCR-related
M + P + T
GTPase activator activity|guanyl-nucleotide exchange


145


gene

factor activity|small GTPase mediated signal







transduction


miR-
NM_001616
ACVR2
activin A receptor, type
M + P + T
ATP binding|integral to plasma


145


II

membrane|membrane|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|receptor activity|transferase







activity|transforming growth factor beta receptor







activity|transmembrane receptor protein







serine/threonine kinase signaling pathway


miR-
NM_003183
ADAM17
a disintegrin and
P + T
cell-cell signaling|integral to plasma


145


metalloproteinase

membrane|metalloendopeptidase activity|proteolysis





domain 17 (tumor

and peptidolysis|zinc ion binding





necrosis factor, alpha,





converting enzyme)


miR-
NM_019903
ADD3
adducin 3 (gamma)
M + P + T
calmodulin binding|cytoskeleton|membrane|structural


145




constituent of cytoskeleton


miR-
AB003476
AKAP12
A kinase (PRKA)
P + T
G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling


145


anchor protein (gravin)

pathway|cytoplasm|protein binding|protein kinase A





12

binding|protein targeting|signal transduction


miR-
NM_016201
AMOTL2
angiomotin like 2
M + P + T


145


miR-
NM_001128
AP1G1
adaptor-related protein
M + P + T
Golgi apparatus|binding|clathrin coat of trans-Golgi


145


complex 1, gamma 1

network vesicle|coated pit|endocytosis|intracellular





subunit

protein transport|intracellular protein







transport|membrane coat adaptor complex|protein







complex assembly|transporter activity


miR-
NM_001284
AP3S1
adaptor-related protein
M + P + T
Golgi apparatus|clathrin vesicle coat|insulin receptor


145


complex 3, sigma 1

signaling pathway|intracellular protein





subunit

transport|membrane coat adaptor







complex|transport|transport vesicle|transporter activity


miR-
NM_006380
APPBP2
amyloid beta precursor
M + P + T
binding|cytoplasm|intracellular protein


145


protein (cytoplasmic

transport|membrane|microtubule associated





tail) binding protein 2

complex|microtubule motor activity|nucleus


miR-
AB037845
ARHGAP10
Rho-GTPase activating
M + T
protein binding


145


protein 10


miR-
AL516350
ARPC5
actin related protein 2/3
P + T
Arp2/3 protein complex|actin cytoskeleton


145


complex, subunit 5,

organization and biogenesis|cell





16 kDa

motility|cytoplasm|cytoskeleton|regulation of actin







filament polymerization|structural constituent of







cytoskeleton


miR-
U72937
ATRX
alpha
M + T
ATP binding|DNA binding|DNA helicase


145


thalassemia/mental

activity|DNA methylation|DNA recombination|DNA





retardation syndrome

repair|chromosome organization and biogenesis





X-linked (RAD54

(sensu Eukaryota)|helicase activity|hydrolase





homolog, S. cerevisiae)

activity|nuclear heterochromatin|nucleus|perception of







sound|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_021813
BACH2
BTB and CNC
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|protein binding|regulation of


145


homology 1, basic

transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription





leucine zipper





transcription factor 2


miR-
NM_013449
BAZ2A
bromodomain adjacent
P + T
DNA binding|chromatin remodeling|nucleolus


145


to zinc finger domain,

organizer complex|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





2A

DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription regulator







activity


miR-
NM_007005
BCE-1
BCE-1 protein
M + P
frizzled signaling pathway|molecular_function


145




unknown|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent


miR-
NM_003458
BSN
bassoon (presynaptic
P + T
cytoskeleton|metal ion binding|nucleus|structural


145


cytomatrix protein)

constituent of cytoskeleton|synapse|synaptic







transmission|synaptosome


miR-
NM_013279
C11orf9
chromosome 11 open
M + P + T


145


reading frame 9


miR-
NM_024643
C14orf140
hypothetical protein
P + T


145


FLJ23093


miR-
NM_018270
C20orf20
chromosome 20 open
P + T
chromatin modification|nucleus|regulation of cell


145


reading frame 20

growth|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription


miR-
NM_004276
CABP1
calcium binding protein
P + T
calcium ion binding|calcium ion binding|enzyme


145


1 (calbrain)

inhibitor activity


miR-
NM_001755
CBFB
core-binding factor,
M + P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


145


beta subunit

activity|nucleus|transcription coactivator







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_001759
CCND2
cyclin D2
P + T
cytokinesis|nucleus|regulation of cell cycle


145


miR-
NM_020307
CCNL1
cyclin L ania-6a
M + P + T
cell cycle|regulation of cell cycle


145


miR-
AL118798
CD47
CD47 antigen (Rh-
P + T
cell-matrix adhesion|integral to plasma


145


related antigen,

membrane|integrin-mediated signaling





integrin-associated

pathway|plasma membrane|protein binding





signal transducer)


miR-
BF576053
CFL2
cofilin 2 (muscle)
M + P + T
actin binding|cytoskeleton|nucleus


145


miR-
AA835485
CKLiK
CamKI-like protein
P + T
ATP binding|calcium- and calmodulin-dependent


145


kinase

protein kinase activity|calmodulin







binding|nucleus|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_004921
CLCA3
chloride channel,
P + T
extracellular space|transport|transporter activity


145


calcium activated,





family member 3


miR-
NM_001326
CSTF3
cleavage stimulation
M + P + T
RNA binding|binding|mRNA cleavage|mRNA


145


factor, 3′ pre-RNA,

polyadenylylation|nucleus





subunit 3, 77 kDa


miR-
NM_020248
CTNNBIP1
catenin, beta interacting
P + T
Wnt receptor signaling pathway|beta-catenin


145


protein 1

binding|cell







proliferation|development|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transduction


miR-
AW772082
DACH
dachshund homolog
P + T
DNA binding|development|eye morphogenesis (sensu


145


(Drosophila)

Endopterygota)|nucleus|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription


miR-
NM_004393
DAG1
dystroglycan 1
M + P + T
actin cytoskeleton|calcium ion binding|extracellular


145


(dystrophin-associated

matrix (sensu Metazoa)|integral to plasma





glycoprotein 1)

membrane|laminin receptor activity|membrane







fraction|muscle contraction|plasma membrane|protein







binding|protein complex assembly


miR-
NM_003887
DDEF2
development and
P + T
GTPase activator activity|Golgi apparatus|regulation


145


differentiation

of GTPase activity





enhancing factor 2


miR-
AL080239
DKFZp547M2010
hypothetical protein
M + P + T


145


DKFZp547M2010


miR-
AL137517
DKFZp564O1278
hypothetical protein
P + T
integral to membrane


145


DKFZp564O1278


miR-
NM_001386
DPYSL2
dihydropyrimidinase-
P + T
dihydropyrimidinase activity|hydrolase


145


like 2

activity|neurogenesis|nucleobase, nucleoside,







nucleotide and nucleic acid metabolism|signal







transduction


miR-
BC003143
DUSP6
dual specificity
P + T
MAP kinase phosphatase activity|cytoplasm|hydrolase


145


phosphatase 6

activity|inactivation of MAPK|protein amino acid







dephosphorylation|protein serine/threonine







phosphatase activity|protein tyrosine phosphatase







activity|regulation of cell cycle|soluble fraction


miR-
D86550
DYRK1A
dual-specificity
P + T
ATP binding|neurogenesis|nucleus|protein amino acid


145


tyrosine-(Y)-

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase





phosphorylation

activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|transferase





regulated kinase 1A

activity


miR-
NM_001967
EIF4A2
eukaryotic translation
M + P + T
ATP binding|ATP-dependent helicase activity|DNA


145


initiation factor 4A,

binding|RNA binding|eukaryotic translation initiation





isoform 2

factor 4F complex|hydrolase activity|protein







biosynthesis|regulation of translational







initiation|translation initiation factor activity


miR-
NM_001417
EIF4B
eukaryotic translation
M + T
RNA binding|eukaryotic translation initiation factor


145


initiation factor 4B

4F complex|nucleic acid binding|nucleotide







binding|protein biosynthesis|regulation of translational







initiation|translation initiation factor







activity|translation initiation factor activity


miR-
BC005057
EIF4EBP2
eukaryotic translation
P + T
eukaryotic initiation factor 4E binding|negative


145


initiation factor 4E

regulation of protein biosynthesis|negative regulation





binding protein 2

of translational initiation|regulation of translation


miR-
NM_020909
EPB41L5
erythrocyte membrane
P + T
binding|cytoplasm|cytoskeletal protein


145


protein band 4.1 like 5

binding|cytoskeleton|membrane


miR-
NM_005797
EVA1
epithelial V-like antigen 1
P + T
cell adhesion|cytoskeleton|homophilic cell


145




adhesion|integral to







membrane|membrane|morphogenesis|protein binding


miR-
NM_022977
FACL4
fatty-acid-Coenzyme A
M + P + T
fatty acid metabolism|integral to membrane|learning


145


ligase, long-chain 4

and/or memory|ligase activity|lipid metabolism|long-







chain-fatty-acid-CoA ligase activity|magnesium ion







binding|metabolism


miR-
AL042120
FHOD2
formin homology 2
M + P
Rho GTPase binding|actin binding|actin cytoskeleton


145


domain containing 2

organization and biogenesis|cell organization and







biogenesis|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription factor activity|translation







initiation factor activity|translational initiation


miR-
NM_002013
FKBP3
FK506 binding protein
P + T
FK506 binding|isomerase activity|nucleus|peptidyl-


145


3, 25 kDa

prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity|protein







folding|receptor activity


miR-
NM_002017
FLI1
Friend leukemia virus
M + P + T
hemostasis|nucleus|organogenesis|regulation of


145


integration 1

transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_023071
FLJ13117
hypothetical protein
P + T


145


FLJ13117


miR-
AL561281
FLJ20373
hypothetical protein
M + P + T
ATP binding|cellular_component unknown|protein


145


FLJ20373

amino acid phosphorylation|protein kinase







cascade|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|response to stress|signal transduction|small







GTPase regulator activity|transferase activity


miR-
AK025444
FLJ21791
hypothetical protein
M + T


145


FLJ21791


miR-
NM_024713
FLJ22557
hypothetical protein
P + T


145


FLJ22557


miR-
AA872588
FLJ36155
likely ortholog of
P + T
DNA binding|negative regulation of transcription


145


mouse Gli-similar 1

from RNA polymerase II promoter|nucleus|positive





Kruppel-like zinc finger

regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II





(Glis1)

promoter|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|specific RNA polymerase II transcription







factor activity|transcription|zinc ion binding


miR-
AI434509
FLJ38499
Unnamed protein
P + T
nucleic acid binding


145


product [Homo






sapiens], mRNA






sequence


miR-
M62994
FLNB
filamin B, beta (actin
P + T
actin binding|actin binding|actin cytoskeleton|actin


145


binding protein 278)

cytoskeleton organization and biogenesis|cell







differentiation|cytoskeletal anchoring|integral to







plasma membrane|myogenesis|signal transduction


miR-
NM_002025
FMR2
fragile X mental
M + T
brain development|learning and/or memory


145


retardation 2


miR-
N29672
FOS
v-fos FBJ murine
M + T
proto-oncogene


145


osteosarcoma viral





oncogene homolog


miR-
NM_002015
FOX01A
forkhead box O1A
M + P + T
anti-apoptosis|nucleus|regulation of transcription from


145


(rhabdomyosarcoma)

RNA polymerase II







promoter|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_003507
FZD7
frizzled homolog 7
M + P + T
G-protein coupled receptor activity|G-protein coupled


145


(Drosophila)

receptor protein signaling pathway|Wnt receptor







activity|development|frizzled signaling







pathway|integral to membrane|plasma membrane


miR-
AL049709
GGTL3
gamma-
M + P + T


145


glutamyltransferase-like 3


miR-
NM_022735
GOCAP1
golgi complex
M + P + T
Golgi apparatuslacyl-CoA binding|catalytic


145


associated protein 1,

activity|intracellular protein





60 kDa

transport|membrane|mitochondrion|protein carrier







activity|steroid biosynthesis


miR-
NM_020806
GPHN
gephyrin
P + T
Mo-molybdopterin cofactor biosynthesis|catalytic


145




activity|cytoskeleton


miR-
NM_015071
GRAF
GTPase regulator
P + T
Rho GTPase activator activitylactin cytoskeleton


145


associated with focal

organization and biogenesis|cellular_component





adhesion kinase

unknown|neurogenesis





pp125(FAK)


miR-
NM_017913
HARC
Hsp90-associating
P + T
cytokinesis|regulation of cell cycle


145


relative of Cdc37


miR-
BC006237
HECTD1
HECT domain
M + T
intracellular|ligase activity|receptor activity|ubiquitin


145


containing 1

cycle|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity


miR-
U64317
HEF1
enhancer of
P + T
actin filament bundle formation|cell


145


filamentation 1 (cas-like

adhesion|cytokinesis|cytoplasm|cytoskeleton|





docking; Crk-associated

cytoskeleton organization and biogenesis|integrin-





substrate related)

mediated signaling pathway|mitosis|nucleus|







protein binding|regulation of cell cycle|regulation







of cell growth|signal transduction|spindle


miR-
NM_016258
HGRG8
high-glucose-regulated
P + T


145


protein 8


miR-
AL162003
HIC2
hypermethylated in
P + T
DNA binding|negative regulation of transcription,


145


cancer 2

DNA-dependent|nucleus|protein C-terminus







binding|transcription|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_014212
HOXC11
homeo box C11
M + P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


145




activity|development|endoderm







development|nucleus|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_002193
INHBB
inhibin, beta B (activin
M + P + T
cell differentiation|cytokine activity|defense


145


AB beta polypeptide)

response|extracellular region|growth|growth factor







activity|hormone activity|host cell surface receptor







binding|negative regulation of follicle-stimulating







hormone secretion|negative regulation of hepatocyte







growth factor biosynthesis|ovarian follicle







development|positive regulation of follicle-







stimulating hormone secretion|protein binding|protein







homodimerization activity|response to external







stimulus


miR-
NM_005544
IRS1
insulin receptor
M + P + T
cytoplasm|insulin receptor binding|protein


145


substrate 1

binding|signal transducer activity|signal







transduction|transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine







kinase docking protein activity


miR-
NM_006459
KEO4
similar to
P + T
catalytic activity


145


Caenorhabditis elegans





protein C42C1.9


miR-
NM_014686
KIAA0355
KIAA0355 gene
P + T


145


product


miR-
NM_015176
KIAA0483
KIAA0483 protein
P + T
ubiquitin cycle


145


miR-
NM_014871
KIAA0710
KIAA0710 gene
M + P + T
cysteine-type endopeptidase activity|exonuclease


145


product

activity|nucleus|ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin thiolesterase







activity|ubiquitin-dependent protein catabolism


miR-
AA772278
KIAA1673
KIAA1673
M + P + T


145


miR-
AB051495
KIAA1708
KIAA1708 protein
P + T
ATP binding|microtubule associated


145




complex|microtubule motor activity|microtubule-







based movement


miR-
AI814587
KIAA1715
KIAA1715 protein
M + T


145


miR-
AI187364
KIAA1894
KIAA1894 protein
P + T
integral to membrane


145


miR-
AF155117
KIF21A
kinesin family member
P + T
ATP binding|microtubule associated


145


21A

complex|microtubule motor activity|microtubule-







based movement


miR-
NM_004235
KLF4
Kruppel-like factor 4
M + T
mesodermal cell fate determination|negative


145


(gut)

regulation of cell proliferation|negative regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|negative regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|nucleic acid







binding|nucleus|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity|transcriptional







activator activity|transcriptional activator







activity|transcriptional repressor







activity|transcriptional repressor activity|zinc ion







binding|zinc ion binding


miR-
T68150
LL5beta
hypothetical protein
M + T


145


FLJ21791


miR-
AI797833
LOC285148
a disintegrin and
P + T
catalytic activity


145


metalloproteinase





domain 17 (tumor





necrosis factor, alpha,





converting enzyme)


miR-
NM_025146
MAK3P
likely ortholog of
P + T
N-acetyltransferase activity


145


mouse Mak3p homolog





(S. cerevisiae)


miR-
BF971923
MAP3K3
mitogen-activated
M + P
ATP binding|MAP kinase kinase kinase


145


protein kinase kinase

activity|MAPKKK cascade|magnesium ion





kinase 3

binding|positive regulation of I-kappaB kinase/NF-







kappaB cascade|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein kinase activity|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|signal transducer







activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_004834
MAP4K4
mitogen-activated
M + P + T
ATP binding|cellular_component unknown|protein


145


protein kinase kinase

amino acid phosphorylation|protein kinase





kinase kinase 4

cascade|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|response to stress|signal transduction|small







GTPase regulator activity|transferase activity


miR-
BF382281
MGC10120

Homo sapiens cDNA

P + T


145


FLJ30135 fis, clone





BRACE2000061,





mRNA sequence


miR-
BG231756
MGC10986
hypothetical protein
M + P
ATP binding|MAP kinase kinase kinase


145


MGC10986

activity|MAPKKK cascade|magnesium ion







binding|positive regulation of I-kappaB kinase/NF-







kappaB cascade|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein kinase activity|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|signal transducer







activity|transferase activity


miR-
BC004869
MGC2817
hypothetical protein
P + T
outer membrane|protein transport


145


MGC2817


miR-
BC002712
MYCN
v-myc
M + T
chromatin|nucleus|protein binding|regulation of


145


myelocytomatosis viral

transcription from RNA polymerase II





related oncogene,

promoter|transcription factor activity





neuroblastoma derived





(avian)


miR-
AB007899
NEDD4L
neural precursor cell
P + T
excretion|intracellular|intracellular|ligase


145


expressed,

activity|positive regulation of endocytosis|protein





developmentally down-

binding|protein ubiquitination|regulation of protein





regulated 4-like

catabolism|response to metal ion|sodium channel







regulator activity|sodium ion homeostasis|sodium ion







transport|ubiquitin cycle|ubiquitin-protein ligase







activity|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|water







homeostasis


miR-
NM_005863
NET1
neuroepithelial cell
P + T
guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor


145


transforming gene 1

activity|nucleus|regulation of cell growth|signal







transduction


miR-
NM_003204
NFE2L1
nuclear factor
P + T
DNA binding|heme biosynthesis|inflammatory


145


(erythroid-derived 2)-

response|morphogenesis|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of





like 1

transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription cofactor







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-
NM_006469
NS1-BP
NS1-binding protein
M + P + T
RNA splicing|protein binding|response to


145




virus|spliceosome complex|transcription factor







complex|transcription from RNA polymerase III







promoter


miR-
NM_019094
NUDT4
nudix (nucleoside
P + T
calcium-mediated signaling|cyclic nucleotide


145


diphosphate linked

metabolism|cyclic-nucleotide-mediated





moiety X)-type motif 4

signaling|diphosphoinositol-polyphosphate







diphosphatase activity|hydrolase







activity|intracellular|intracellular signaling







cascade|intracellular transport|magnesium ion







binding|regulation of RNA-nucleus export


miR-
AW149417
OAZ
OLF-1/EBF associated
P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|zinc ion binding


145


zinc finger gene


miR-
NM_024586
OSBPL9
oxysterol binding
M + P
lipid transport|steroid metabolism


145


protein-like 9


miR-
AB040812
PAK7
p21(CDKN1A)-
M + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


145


activated kinase 7

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_014456
PDCD4
programmed cell death
M + P + T
apoptosis


145


4 (neoplastic





transformation





inhibitor)


miR-
NM_002657
PLAGL2
pleiomorphic adenoma
M + P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


145


gene-like 2

dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
AK023546
PLCL2
phospholipase C-like 2
P + T
calcium ion binding|intracellular signaling


145




cascade|lipid metabolism|phosphoinositide







phospholipase C activity


miR-
AI274352
PLN
phospholamban
P + T


145


miR-
NM_000944
PPP3CA
protein phosphatase 3
P + T
calcineurin complex|calcium ion binding|calmodulin


145


(formerly 2B), catalytic

binding|hydrolase activity|protein amino acid





subunit, alpha isoform

dephosphorylation|protein serine/threonine





(calcineurin A alpha)

phosphatase activity


miR-
BF247371
PRO1843
hypothetical protein
M + T


145


PRO1843


miR-
NM_000959
PTGFR
prostaglandin F receptor
P + T
G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling


145


(FP)

pathway|G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling







pathway|integral to membrane|integral to plasma







membrane|parturition|prostaglandin F receptor







activity|prostaglandin F receptor activity|receptor







activity|rhodopsin-like receptor activity|signal







transduction|thromboxane receptor activity


miR-
NM_002890
RASA1
RAS p21 protein
P + T
Ras GTPase activator activity|intracellular signaling


145


activator (GTPase

cascade





activating protein) 1


miR-
NM_006506
RASA2
RAS p21 protein
P + T
Ras GTPase activator activity|intracellular signaling


145


activator 2

cascade


miR-
NM_002912
REV3L
REV3-like, catalytic
M + P + T
3′-5′ exonuclease activity|DNA binding|DNA


145


subunit of DNA

repair|DNA replication|DNA-dependent DNA





polymerase zeta (yeast)

replication|DNA-directed DNA polymerase







activity|nucleotide binding|nucleus|transferase







activity|zeta DNA polymerase activity|zeta DNA







polymerase complex


miR-
NM_002924
RGS7
regulator of G-protein
P + T
heterotrimeric G-protein complex|intracellular


145


signalling 7

signaling cascade|regulation of G-protein coupled







receptor protein signaling pathway|regulator of G-







protein signaling activity|signal transducer activity


miR-
AL136924
RIN2
Ras and Rab interactor 2
P + T
GTPase activator activity|Rab guanyl-nucleotide


145




exchange factor activity|cellular_component







unknown|endocytosis|intracellular signaling







cascade|small GTPase mediated signal







transduction|small GTPase regulator activity


miR-
BE463945
RTKN
rhotekin
P + T
intracellular|protein binding|signal transduction|signal


145




transduction


miR-
AF225986
SCN3A
sodium channel,
P + T
cation channel activity|cation transport|integral to


145


voltage-gated, type III,

membrane|membrane|sodium ion transport|voltage-





alpha polypeptide

gated sodium channel activity|voltage-gated sodium







channel complex


miR-
NM_006080
SEMA3A
sema domain,
P + T
cell differentiation|extracellular region|neurogenesis


145


immunoglobulin





domain (Ig), short basic





domain, secreted,





(semaphorin) 3A


miR-
NM_020796
SEMA6A
sema domain,
P + T
apoptosis|axonlaxon guidance|cell differentiation|cell


145


transmembrane domain

surface receptor linked signal





(TM), and cytoplasmic

transduction|cytoskeleton organization and





domain, (semaphorin)

biogenesis|development|integral to





6A

membrane|membrane|neurogenesis|protein







binding|receptor activity


miR-
NM_004171
SLC1A2
solute carrier family 1
P + T
L-glutamate transport|L-glutamate transporter


145


(glial high affinity

activity|dicarboxylic acid transport|integral to





glutamate transporter),

membrane|membrane|membrane





member 2

fraction|sodium:dicarboxylate symporter







activity|symporter activity|synaptic







transmission|transport


miR-
NM_003759
SLC4A4
solute carrier family 4,
P + T
anion transport|inorganic anion exchanger


145


sodium bicarbonate

activity|integral to membrane|integral to plasma





cotransporter, member 4

membrane|membrane|sodium:bicarbonate symporter







activity|transport


miR-
NM_030918
SNX27
hypothetical protein
M + P + T
intracellular signaling cascade|protein binding|protein


145


My014

transport


miR-
AI360875
SOX11
SRY (sex determining
M + T
DNA binding|neurogenesis|nucleus|regulation of


145


region Y)-box 11

transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription


miR-
NM_000346
SOX9
SRY (sex determining
P + T
DNA binding|cartilage


145


region Y)-box 9

condensation|nucleus|regulation of transcription from





(campomelic dysplasia,

RNA polymerase II promoter|skeletal





autosomal sex-reversal)

development|specific RNA polymerase II







transcription factor activity|transcription


miR-
AK023899
SRGAP1
SLIT-ROBO Rho
P + T
GTPase activator activity


145


GTPase activating





protein 1


miR-
NM_003155
STC1
stanniocalcin 1
M + T
calcium ion homeostasis|cell surface receptor linked


145




signal transduction|cell-cell signaling|extracellular







region|hormone activity|response to nutrients


miR-
BE219311
TIMM22
translocase of inner
M + P + T
integral to membrane|mitochondrial inner


145


mitochondrial

membrane|mitochondrion|protein transport|protein





membrane 22 homolog

transporter activity





(yeast)


miR-
AA705845
TLE4
transducin-like
M + P
frizzled signaling pathway|molecular_function


145


enhancer of split 4

unknown|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of





(E(sp1) homolog,

transcription|regulation of transcription, DNA-






Drosophila)


dependent


miR-
BC005016
TRIM2
tripartite motif-
P + T
cytoplasm|myosin binding|protein


145


containing 2

ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase complex|ubiquitin-







protein ligase activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_025076
UXS1
UDP-glucuronate
M + P + T
carbohydrate metabolism|isomerase


145


decarboxylase 1

activity|nucleotide-sugar metabolism


miR-
NM_005433
YES1
v-yes-1 Yamaguchi
P + T
ATP binding|intracellular signaling cascade|protein


145


sarcoma viral oncogene

amino acid phosphorylation|protein-tyrosine kinase





homolog 1

activity|transferase activity


miR-
BC003128
ZDHHC9
zinc finger, DHHC
P + T
integral to membrane|metal ion binding


145


domain containing 9


miR-
NM_019903
ADD3
adducin 3 (gamma)
P + T
calmodulin binding|cytoskeleton|membrane|structural


155




constituent of cytoskeleton


miR-
NM_020661
AICDA
activation-induced
P + T
B-cell differentiation|cellular_component


155


cytidine deaminase

unknown|cytidine deaminase activity|hydrolase







activity|mRNA processing|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_007202
AKAP10
A kinase (PRKA)
P + T
kinase activity|mitochondrion|protein binding|protein


155


anchor protein 10

localization|signal transducer activity|signal







transduction


miR-
AI806395
ALFY
ALFY
P + T
binding|zinc ion binding


155


miR-
NM_000038
APC
adenomatosis polyposis
P + T
Wnt receptor signaling pathway|beta-catenin


155


coli

binding|cell adhesion|microtubule binding|negative







regulation of cell cycle|protein complex







assembly|signal transduction


miR-
NM_017610
ARK
Arkadia
P + T
protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


155




complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
BG032269
ARL8
ADP-ribosylation-like
M + P + T
GTP binding|small GTPase mediated signal


155


factor 8

transduction


miR-
AB000815
ARNTL
aryl hydrocarbon
P + T
circadian rhythm|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


155


receptor nuclear

DNA-dependent|signal transducer activity|signal





translocator-like

transduction|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
NM_001670
ARVCF
armadillo repeat gene
P + T
cell adhesion|cytoskeleton|development|protein


155


deletes in

binding|structural molecule activity





velocardiofacial





syndrome


miR-
AK024064
ASTN2
astrotactin 2
P + T
integral to membrane


155


miR-
M95541
ATP2B1
ATPase, Ca++
M + P + T
ATP binding|calcium ion binding|calcium ion


155


transporting, plasma

transport|calcium-transporting ATPase





membrane 1

activity|calmodulin binding|cation transport|hydrolase







activity|hydrolase activity, acting on acid anhydrides,







catalyzing transmembrane movement of







substances|integral to plasma membrane|magnesium







ion binding|membrane|metabolism


miR-
NM_001186
BACH1
BTB and CNC
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|protein binding|regulation of


155


homology 1, basic

transcription, DNA-





leucine zipper

dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity





transcription factor 1


miR-
NM_007005
BCE-1
BCE-1 protein
P + T
frizzled signaling pathway|molecular_function


155




unknown|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent


miR-
NM_022893
BCL11A
B-cell CLL/lymphoma
P + T
cytoplasm|hemopoiesis|nucleic acid


155


11A (zinc finger

binding|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





protein)

DNA-dependent|transcription|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_001709
BDNF
brain-derived
M + T
growth factor activity|growth factor


155


neurotrophic factor

activity|neurogenesis


miR-
NM_014577
BRD1
bromodomain
P + T
DNA binding|cell cycle|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of


155


containing 1

transcription, DNA-dependent


miR-
NM_024529
C1orf28
chromosome 1 open
M + P + T


155


reading frame 28


miR-
NM_000719
CACNA1C
calcium channel,
P + T
calcium ion binding|calcium ion transport|cation


155


voltage-dependent, L

transport|integral to membrane|ion channel





type, alpha 1C subunit

activity|ion transport|membrane|regulation of heart







contraction rate|voltage-gated calcium channel







activity|voltage-gated calcium channel







activity|voltage-gated calcium channel







complex|voltage-gated calcium channel complex


miR-
AL118798
CD47
CD47 antigen (Rh-
P + T
cell-matrix adhesion|integral to plasma


155


related antigen,

membrane|integrin-mediated signaling





integrin-associated

pathway|plasma membrane|protein binding





signal transducer)


miR-
AL564683
CEBPB
CCAAT/enhancer
M + P + T
acute-phase response|inflammatory


155


binding protein

response|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





(C/EBP), beta

dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-
NM_007023
CGEF2
cAMP-regulated
M + P
3′,5′-cAMP binding|G-protein coupled receptor


155


guanine nucleotide

protein signaling pathway|cAMP-dependent protein





exchange factor II

kinase complex|cAMP-dependent protein kinase







regulator activity|exocytosis|guanyl-nucleotide







exchange factor activity|membrane fraction|nucleotide







binding|protein amino acid phosphorylation|small







GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
AU152178
CMG2
capillary
P + T
integral to membrane|receptor activity


155


morphogenesis protein 2


miR-
NM_005776
CNIH
cornichon homolog
P + T
immune response|integral to membrane|intracellular


155


(Drosophila)

signaling cascade|membrane


miR-
AW241703
CNTN4

Homo sapiens cDNA

P + T
cell adhesion|membrane|protein binding


155


FLJ32716 fis, clone





TESTI2000808, highly





similar to Rattus






norvegicus neural cell






adhesion protein BIG-2





precursor (BIG-2)





mRNA, mRNA





sequence


miR-
NM_000094
COL7A1
collagen, type VII,
P + T
basement membrane|cell adhesion|collagen type


155


alpha 1 (epidermolysis

VII|cytoplasm|epidermis development|phosphate





bullosa, dystrophic,

transport|protein binding|serine-type endopeptidase





dominant and recessive)

inhibitor activity|structural molecule activity


miR-
NM_003653
COPS3
COP9 constitutive
P + T
signalosome complex


155


photomorphogenic





homolog subunit 3





(Arabidopsis)


miR-
NM_005211
CSF1R
colony stimulating
M + P + T
ATP binding|antimicrobial humoral response (sensu


155


factor 1 receptor,

Vertebrata)|cell proliferation|development|integral to





formerly McDonough

plasma membrane|macrophage colony stimulating





feline sarcoma viral (v-

factor receptor activity|plasma membrane|protein





fms) oncogene homolog

amino acid phosphorylation|receptor activity|signal







transduction|transferase activity|transmembrane







receptor protein tyrosine kinase signaling pathway


miR-
NM_001892
CSNK1A1
casein kinase 1, alpha 1
P + T
ATP binding|Wnt receptor signaling pathway|casein


155




kinase I activity|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|transferase







activity


miR-
NM_005214
CTLA4
cytotoxic T-
P + T
immune response|immune response|integral to plasma


155


lymphocyte-associated

membrane|membrane





protein 4


miR-
U69546
CUGBP2
CUG triplet repeat,
M + P + T
RNA binding|RNA binding|RNA


155


RNA binding protein 2

processing|neuromuscular junction







development|nucleotide binding|regulation of heart







contraction rate


miR-
NM_030927
DC-
tetraspanin similar to
P + T
integral to membrane


155

TM4F2
TM4SF9


miR-
NM_015652
DKFZP564P1916
DKFZP564P1916
P + T


155


protein


miR-
AF151831
DKFZP566C134
DKFZP566C134
P + T
protein binding


155


protein


miR-
NM_004411
DNCI1
dynein, cytoplasmic,
P + T
cytoplasmic dynein complex|motor activity


155


intermediate





polypeptide 1


miR-
NM_001400
EDG1
endothelial
P + T
G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling


155


differentiation,

pathway|cell adhesion|integral to plasma





sphingolipid G-protein-

membrane|lysosphingolipid and lysophosphatidic acid





coupled receptor, 1

receptor activity|plasma membrane|receptor







activity|signal transduction


miR-
NM_006795
EHD1
EH-domain containing 1
P + T
ATP binding|GTP binding|GTPase


155




activity|biological_process unknown|calcium ion







binding|cellular_component unknown


miR-
NM_012081
ELL2
ELL-related RNA
M + P + T
RNA elongation from RNA polymerase II


155


polymerase II,

promoter|RNA polymerase II transcription factor





elongation factor

activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription elongation factor







complex


miR-
NM_005238
ETS1
v-ets erythroblastosis
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


155


virus E26 oncogene

activity|immune response|negative regulation of cell





homolog 1 (avian)

proliferation|nucleus|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-
NM_002009
FGF7
fibroblast growth factor
P + T
cell proliferation|cell-cell signaling|epidermis


155


7 (keratinocyte growth

development|extracellular region|growth factor





factor)

activity|positive regulation of cell







proliferation|regulation of cell cycle|response to







wounding|signal transduction


miR-
NM_018208
FLJ10761
hypothetical protein
P + T
biological_process unknown|cellular_component


155


FLJ10761

unknown|choline kinase activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_018243
FLJ10849
hypothetical protein
P + T
GTP binding|cell cycle|cytokinesis


155


FLJ10849


miR-
NM_022064
FLJ12565
hypothetical protein
P + T
ligase activity|protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase


155


FLJ12565

complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
NM_018391
FLJ23277
FLJ23277 protein
P + T


155


miR-
NM_021078
GCN5L2
GCN5 general control
M + P + T
N-acetyltransferase activity|chromatin


155


of amino-acid synthesis

remodeling|histone acetyltransferase activity|histone





5-like 2 (yeast)

deacetylase binding|nucleus|protein amino acid







acetylation|regulation of transcription from RNA







polymerase II promoter|transcription|transcription







coactivator activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_018178
GPP34R
hypothetical protein
P + T


155


FLJ10687


miR-
AF019214
HBP1
HMG-box containing
M + P
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


155


protein 1

DNA-dependent


miR-
NM_006037
HDAC4
histone deacetylase 4
P + T
B-cell differentiation|cell cycle|chromatin


155




modification|cytoplasm|development|histone







deacetylase activity|histone deacetylase







complex|hydrolase activity|inflammatory







response|negative regulation of







myogenesis|neurogenesis|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







binding|transcriptional repressor activity


miR-
NM_001530
HIF1A
hypoxia-inducible
P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor activity,


155


factor 1, alpha subunit

enhancer binding|electron transport|histone





(basic helix-loop-helix

acetyltransferase





transcription factor)

binding|homeostasis|nucleus|nucleus|protein







heterodimerization activity|protein heterodimerization







activity|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|response to hypoxia|signal transducer







activity|signal transduction|signal







transduction|transcription factor activity


miR-
AL023584
HIVEP2
human
P + T


155


immunodeficiency virus





type I enhancer binding





protein 2


miR-
AI682088
HLCS
holocarboxylase
P + T
biotin-[acetyl-CoA-carboxylase] ligase activity|biotin-


155


synthetase (biotin-

[methylcrotonoyl-CoA-carboxylase] ligase





[proprionyl-Coenzyme

activity|biotin-[methylmalonyl-CoA-





A-carboxylase (ATP-

carboxytransferase] ligase activity|biotin-[propionyl-





hydrolysing)] ligase)

CoA-carboxylase (ATP-hydrolyzing)] ligase







activity|ligase activity|protein modification


miR-
NM_020190
HNOEL-
HNOEL-iso protein
P + T


155

iso


miR-
NM_014002
IKBKE
inhibitor of kappa light
P + T
ATP binding|NF-kappaB-inducing kinase


155


polypeptide gene

activity|cytoplasm|immune response|positive





enhancer in B-cells,

regulation of I-kappaB kinase/NF-kappaB





kinase epsilon

cascade|protein amino acid phosphorylation|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|signal transducer







activity|transferase activity


miR-
D13720
ITK
IL2-inducible T-cell
P + T
ATP binding|cellular defense response|intracellular


155


kinase

signaling cascade|non-membrane spanning protein







tyrosine kinase activity|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|transferase activity


miR-
NM_002249
KCNN3
potassium
P + T
calcium-activated potassium channel activity|calcium-


155


intermediate/small

activated potassium channel activity|calmodulin





conductance calcium-

binding|integral to membrane|ion channel activity|ion





activated channel,

transport|membrane|membrane





subfamily N, member 3

fraction|neurogenesis|potassium ion







transport|potassium ion transport|small conductance







calcium-activated potassium channel activity|synaptic







transmission|voltage-gated potassium channel







complex


miR-
AB033100
KIAA1274
KIAA protein (similar
P + T
protein tyrosine phosphatase activity


155


to mouse paladin)


miR-
NM_017780
KIAA1416
KIAA1416 protein
P + T
ATP binding|chromatin|chromatin assembly or


155




disassembly|chromatin binding|helicase







activity|nucleus


miR-
NM_002264
KPNA1
karyopherin alpha 1
P + T
NLS-bearing substrate-nucleus


155


(importin alpha 5)

import|cytoplasm|intracellular protein







transport|nuclear localization sequence







binding|nuclear pore|nucleus|protein binding|protein







transporter activity|regulation of DNA recombination


miR-
AK021602
KPNA4
karyopherin alpha 4
P + T
NLS-bearing substrate-nucleus


155


(importin alpha 3)

import|binding|intracellular protein







transport|nucleus|protein transporter activity


miR-
NM_020354
LALP1
lysosomal apyrase-like
M + P + T
hydrolase activity


155


protein 1


miR-
AW242408
LOC151531
Similar to uridine
M + P + T
cytosol|nucleoside metabolism|nucleotide


155


phosphorylase [Homo

catabolism|protein binding|transferase activity,






sapiens], mRNA


transferring glycosyl groups|type III intermediate





sequence

filament|uridine metabolism|uridine phosphorylase







activity


miR-
NM_016210
LOC51161
g20 protein
P + T


155


miR-
NM_018557
LRP1B
low density lipoprotein-
P + T
calcium ion binding|integral to membrane|low-density


155


related protein 1B

lipoprotein receptor activity|membrane|protein





(deleted in tumors)

transport|receptor activity|receptor mediated







endocytosis


miR-
NM_002446
MAP3K10
mitogen-activated
M + P + T
ATP binding|JUN kinase kinase kinase


155


protein kinase kinase

activity|activation of





kinase 10

JNK|autophosphorylation|induction of







apoptosis|protein homodimerization activity|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein-tyrosine







kinase activity|signal transduction|transferase activity


miR-
NM_003954
MAP3K14
mitogen-activated
P + T
ATP binding|protein amino acid


155


protein kinase kinase

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase





kinase 14

activity|transferase activity


miR-
AL117407
MAP3K7IP2
mitogen-activated
P + T
kinase activity|positive regulation of I-kappaB


155


protein kinase kinase

kinase/NF-kappaB cascade|positive regulation of I-





kinase 7 interacting

kappaB kinase/NF-kappaB cascade|signal transducer





protein 2

activity|signal transducer activity


miR-
NM_004992
MECP2
methyl CpG binding
M + P + T
DNA binding|negative regulation of transcription


155


protein 2 (Rett

from RNA polymerase II promoter|nucleus|regulation





syndrome)

of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription corepressor







activity


miR-
NM_002398
MEIS1
Meis1, myeloid
M + P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


155


ecotropic viral

activity|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





integration site 1

dependent|transcription factor activity





homolog (mouse)


miR-
NM_016289
MO25
MO25 protein
P + T


155


miR-
AA621962
MYO1D
myosin ID
M + P + T
ATP bindinglactin binding|calmodulin binding|motor


155




activity|myosin


miR-
NM_030571
N4WBP5
likely ortholog of
P + T
positive regulation of I-kappaB kinase/NF-kappaB


155


mouse Nedd4 WW

cascade|signal transducer activity





binding protein 5


miR-
NM_014903
NAV3
neuron navigator 3
P + T
ATP binding|mitochondrion|nucleoside-


155




triphosphatase activity|nucleotide binding


miR-
NM_030571
NDFIP1
likely ortholog of
P + T
positive regulation of I-kappaB kinase/NF-kappaB


155


mouse Nedd4 WW

cascade|signal transducer activity





binding protein 5


miR-
NM_006599
NFAT5
nuclear factor of
M + P + T
RNA polymerase II transcription factor


155


activated T-cells 5,

activity|excretion|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





tonicity-responsive

DNA-dependent|signal transduction|transcription







factor activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-
NM_002515
NOVA1
neuro-oncological
M + P + T
RNA binding|RNA binding|RNA splicing|RNA


155


ventral antigen 1

splicing|locomotory behavior|locomotory







behavior|nucleus|synaptic transmission|synaptic







transmission


miR-
AI373299
PANK1
pantothenate kinase 1
P + T
ATP binding|coenzyme A biosynthesis|pantothenate


155




kinase activity|transferase activity


miR-
BG110231
PAPOLA
poly(A) polymerase
P + T
RNA binding|cytoplasm|mRNA


155


alpha

polyadenylylation|mRNA







processing|nucleus|polynucleotide adenylyltransferase







activity|transcription|transferase activity


miR-
NM_020403
PCDH9
protocadherin 9
M + P + T
calcium ion binding|cell adhesion|homophilic cell


155




adhesion|integral to membrane|membrane|protein







binding


miR-
NM_002655
PLAG1
pleiomorphic adenoma
P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|transcription factor


155


gene 1

activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
AJ272212
PSKH1
protein serine kinase H1
P + T
ATP binding|Golgi apparatus|nucleus|protein amino


155




acid phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|transferase activity


miR-
NM_014904
Rab11-
KIAA0941 protein
P + T


155

FIP2


miR-
AF322067
RAB34
RAB34, member RAS
P + T
GTP binding|Golgi apparatus|protein transport|small


155


oncogene family

GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
NM_002869
RAB6A
RAB6A, member RAS
M + P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|Golgi apparatus|protein


155


oncogene family

transport|small GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-
AL136727
RAB6C
RAB6C, member RAS
M + P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|intracellular|protein


155


oncogene family

transport|response to drug|small GTPase mediated







signal transduction


miR-
NM_002902
RCN2
reticulocalbin 2, EF-
P + T
calcium ion binding|endoplasmic reticulum|protein


155


hand calcium binding

binding





domain


miR-
AJ223321
RP58
zinc finger protein 238
M + P + T


155


miR-
NM_002968
SALL1
sal-like 1 (Drosophila)
P + T
morphogenesis|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


155




DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_002971
SATB1
special AT-rich
P + T
double-stranded DNA binding|establishment and/or


155


sequence binding

maintenance of chromatin





protein 1 (binds to

architecture|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





nuclear matrix/scaffold-

dependent|transcription factor activity





associating DNA's)


miR-
NM_003469
SCG2
secretogranin II
P + T
calcium ion binding|protein secretion


155


(chromogranin C)


miR-
NM_005625
SDCBP
syndecan binding
P + T
actin cytoskeleton organization and


155


protein (syntenin)

biogenesis|adherens junction|cytoskeletal adaptor







activity|cytoskeleton|endoplasmic







reticulum|interleukin-5 receptor binding|interleukin-5







receptor complex|intracellular signaling







cascade|metabolism|neurexin







binding|nucleus|oxidoreductase activity|plasma







membrane|protein binding|protein heterodimerization







activity|protein-membrane targeting|substrate-bound







cell migration, cell extension|synaptic







transmission|syndecan binding


miR-
NM_000232
SGCB
sarcoglycan, beta
P + T
cytoskeleton|cytoskeleton organization and


155


(43 kDa dystrophin-

biogenesis|integral to plasma membrane|muscle





associated glycoprotein)

development|sarcoglycan complex


miR-
NM_013257
SGKL
serum/glucocorticoid
P + T
ATP binding|intracellular signaling cascade|protein


155


regulated kinase-like

amino acid phosphorylation|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|protein-tyrosine kinase activity|response to







stress|transferase activity


miR-
NM_005069
SIM2
single-minded homolog
P + T
cell differentiation|neurogenesis|nucleus|regulation of


155


2 (Drosophila)

transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transducer







activity|signal transduction|transcription|transcription







factor activity


miR-
AA927480
SKI
v-ski sarcoma viral
P + T


155


oncogene homolog





(avian)


miR-
NM_006748
SLA
Src-like-adaptor
P + T
SH3/SH2 adaptor activity|intracellular signaling


155




cascade


miR-
AI684141
SMARCA4
SWI/SNF related,
P + T
ATP binding|DNA binding|helicase activity|helicase


155


matrix associated, actin

activity|hydrolase





dependent regulator of

activity|nucleoplasm|nucleus|regulation of





chromatin, subfamily a,

transcription from RNA polymerase II





member 4

promoter|transcription|transcription coactivator







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-
AB005043
SOCS1
suppressor of cytokine
M + P + T
JAK-STAT cascade|cytoplasm|insulin-like growth


155


signaling 1

factor receptor binding|intracellular signaling







cascade|negative regulation of JAK-STAT







cascade|protein kinase binding|protein kinase inhibitor







activity|regulation of cell growth|ubiquitin cycle


miR-
NM_004232
SOCS4
suppressor of cytokine
M + P
JAK-STAT cascade|cytoplasm|defense


155


signaling 4

response|intracellular signaling cascade|regulation of







cell growth


miR-
NM_005986
SOX1
SRY (sex determining
P + T
DNA binding|establishment and/or maintenance of


155


region Y)-box 1

chromatin architecture|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription factor







activity


miR-
AI360875
SOX11
SRY (sex determining
M + T
DNA binding|neurogenesis|nucleus|regulation of


155


region Y)-box 11

transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription


miR-
AL136780
SOX6
SRY (sex determining
P + T
establishment and/or maintenance of chromatin


155


region Y)-box 6

architecture|heart development|muscle







development|nucleus|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity


miR-
AW470841
SP3
Sp3 transcription factor
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,


155




DNA-dependent|transcription|transcriptional activator







activity|transcriptional repressor activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-
BF224259
SPF30
splicing factor 30,
P + T
RNA splicing|RNA splicing factor activity,


155


survival of motor

transesterification





neuron-related

mechanism|apoptosis|cytoplasm|induction of







apoptosis|spliceosome assembly|spliceosome complex


miR-
NM_003120
SPI1
spleen focus forming
M + T
negative regulation of transcription from RNA


155


virus (SFFV) proviral

polymerase II promoter|nucleus|regulation of





integration oncogene

transcription, DNA-





spi1

dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-
BE676214
SSH2
slingshot 2
P + T
protein amino acid dephosphorylation|protein


155




tyrosine/serine/threonine phosphatase activity


miR-
AF159447
SUFU
suppressor of fused
P + T
cell cycle|cytoplasm|development|negative regulation


155


homolog (Drosophila)

of cell cycle|nucleus|proteolysis and







peptidolysis|signal transducer activity|signal







transduction|skeletal development|transcription







corepressor activity


miR-
NM_006754
SYPL
synaptophysin-like
M + P + T
integral to plasma membrane|membrane|synaptic


155


protein

transmission|synaptic vesicle|transport|transporter







activity


miR-
NM_006286
TFDP2
transcription factor Dp-
P + T
DNA metabolism|nucleus|regulation of cell


155


2 (E2F dimerization

cycle|regulation of transcription from RNA





partner 2)

polymerase II promoter|transcription|transcription







cofactor activity|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor complex


miR-
AA705845
TLE4
transducin-like
P + T
frizzled signaling pathway|molecular_function


155


enhancer of split 4

unknown|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of





(E(sp1) homolog,

transcription|regulation of transcription, DNA-






Drosophila)


dependent


miR-
NM_014765
TOMM20
translocase of outer
P + T
integral to membrane|mitochondrial outer membrane


155


mitochondrial

translocase complex|mitochondrion|outer





membrane 20 (yeast)

membrane|protein translocase activity|protein-





homolog

mitochondrial targeting


miR-
AW341649
TP53INP1
tumor protein p53
P + T
apoptosis|nucleus


155


inducible nuclear





protein 1


miR-
BC005016
TRIM2
tripartite motif-
P + T
cytoplasm|myosin binding|protein


155


containing 2

ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase complex|ubiquitin-







protein ligase activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
AA524505
TSGA
zinc finger protein
P + T
nucleus


155


miR-
AW157525
TSGA14
testis specific, 14
M + P + T
centrosome


155


miR-
X62048
WEE1
WEE1 homolog (S. pombe)
P + T
ATP binding|cytokinesis|mitosis|nucleus|protein


155




amino acid phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine







kinase activity|protein-tyrosine kinase







activity|regulation of cell cycle|transferase activity


miR-
AC005539
WUGSC:H_NH0335J18.1
Similar to uridine
M + P + T


155


phosphorylase [Homo






sapiens], mRNA






sequence


miR-
NM_003413
ZIC3
Zic family member 3
P + T
DNA binding|determination of left/right


155


heterotaxy 1 (odd-

symmetry|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





paired homolog,

dependent|transcription|zinc ion binding






Drosophila)



miR-
NM_007345
ZNF236
zinc finger protein 236
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-


155




dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|zinc ion binding


miR-
NM_006352
ZNF238
zinc finger protein 238
M + P + T
chromosome organization and biogenesis (sensu


155




Eukaryota)|negative regulation of transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter|nuclear







chromosome|nucleic acid binding|nucleus|protein







binding|protein binding|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|specific RNA polymerase II







transcription factor activity|transcription|transcription







factor activity|transport|zinc ion binding


miR-21
NM_005164
ABCD2
ATP-binding cassette,
M + P
ATP binding|ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter





sub-family D (ALD),

complex|ATPase activity|ATPase activity, coupled to





member 2

transmembrane movement of substances|fatty acid







metabolism|integral to plasma







membrane|membrane|peroxisome|transport


miR-21
NM_001616
ACVR2
activin A receptor, type
P + T
ATP binding|integral to plasma





II

membrane|membrane|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|receptor activity|transferase







activity|transforming growth factor beta receptor







activity|transmembrane receptor protein







serine/threonine kinase signaling pathway


miR-21
NM_015339
ADNP
activity-dependent
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





neuroprotector

dependent|transcription factor activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-21
AI990366
ARHGEF7
Rho guanine nucleotide
P + T
guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activity|signal





exchange factor (GEF) 7

transduction


miR-21
NM_017610
ARK
Arkadia
P + T
protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase







complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-21
NM_014034
ASF1A
DKFZP547E2110
P + T
chromatin binding|loss of chromatin silencing|nucleus





protein


miR-21
NM_017680
ASPN
asporin (LRR class 1)
P + T


miR-21
NM_000657
BCL2
B-cell CLL/lymphoma 2
P + T
anti-apoptosis|endoplasmic reticulum|humoral







immune response|integral to







membrane|membrane|mitochondrial outer







membrane|mitochondrial outer







membrane|mitochondrion|negative regulation of cell







proliferation|nucleus|protein binding|regulation of







apoptosis|regulation of cell cycle|release of







cytochrome c from mitochondria


miR-21
NM_014577
BRD1
bromodomain
P + T
DNA binding|cell cycle|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of





containing 1

transcription, DNA-dependent


miR-21
AA902767
BRD2
bromodomain
P + T
nucleus|protein serine/threonine kinase





containing 2

activity|spermatogenesis


miR-21
NM_014962
BTBD3
BTB (POZ) domain
P + T
protein binding





containing 3


miR-21
NM_006763
BTG2
BTG family, member 2
P + T
DNA repair|negative regulation of cell







proliferation|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-21
AK025768
C20orf99
chromosome 20 open
P + T
nucleic acid binding




reading frame 99


miR-21
AI671238
CAPN3

Homo sapiens cDNA

P + T
calcium ion binding|calpain activity|calpain





FLJ23750 fis, clone

activity|intracellular|intracellular|muscle





HEP16527, mRNA

development|proteolysis and peptidolysis|proteolysis





sequence

and peptidolysis|signal transducer activity


miR-21
NM_002981
CCL1
chemokine (C-C motif)
P + T
calcium ion homeostasis|cell-cell signaling|chemokine





ligand 1

activity|chemotaxis|extracellular space|inflammatory







response|sensory perception|signal transduction|viral







life cycle


miR-21
BF939071
CCM1
cerebral cavernous
M + P
binding|catalytic activity|cytoskeleton|small GTPase





malformations 1

mediated signal transduction|small GTPase regulator







activity


miR-21
NM_001789
CDC25A
cell division cycle 25A
AP + T
cell proliferation|cytokinesis|hydrolase







activity|intracellular|mitosis|protein amino acid







dephosphorylation|protein tyrosine phosphatase







activity|regulation of cyclin dependent protein kinase







activity


miR-21
NM_001842
CNTFR
ciliary neurotrophic
M + P + T
ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor activity|cytokine





factor receptor

binding|extrinsic to membrane|neurogenesis|receptor







activity|signal transduction


miR-21
NM_001310
CREBL2
cAMP responsive
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





element binding

dependent|signal





protein-like 2

transduction|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-21
NM_016441
CRIM1
cysteine-rich motor
M + P + T
insulin-like growth factor receptor activity|integral to





neuron 1

membrane|membrane fraction|neurogenesis|serine-







type endopeptidase inhibitor activity


miR-21
NM_015396
DKFZP434A043
DKFZP434A043
P + T
cell adhesion|cytoskeleton|mitotic chromosome





protein

condensation|protein binding|structural molecule







activity


miR-21
AL047650
DKFZp434A2417
endozepine-related
P + T
acyl-CoA binding





protein precursor


miR-21
AB028628
DKFZP547E2110
DKFZP547E2110
P + T
chromatin binding|loss of chromatin silencing|nucleus





protein


miR-21
NM_031305
DKFZP564B1162
hypothetical protein
P + T
GTPase activator activity





DKFZp564B1162


miR-21
NM_004405
DLX2
distal-less homeo box 2
P + T
brain development|development|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|transcription factor







activity


miR-21
NM_001949
E2F3
E2F transcription factor 3
M + P + T
nucleus|protein binding|regulation of cell







cycle|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor complex|transcription







initiation from RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-21
NM_006795
EHD1
EH-domain containing 1
P + T
ATP binding|GTP binding|GTPase







activity|biological_process unknown|calcium ion







binding|cellular_component unknown


miR-21
NM_001412
EIF1A
eukaryotic translation
P + T
RNA binding|eukaryotic translation initiation factor





initiation factor 1A

4F complex|protein biosynthesis|translation initiation







factor activity|translational initiation|translational







initiation


miR-21
AI832074
EIF2C2
eukaryotic translation
P + T
cellular_component unknown|protein





initiation factor 2C, 2

biosynthesis|translation initiation factor activity


miR-21
NM_006874
ELF2
E74-like factor 2 (ets
P + T
nucleus|nucleus|protein binding|protein





domain transcription

binding|regulation of transcription from RNA





factor)

polymerase II promoter|regulation of transcription,







DNA-dependent|transcription factor







activity|transcriptional activator







activity|transcriptional activator activity


miR-21
NM_004438
EPHA4
EphA4
P + T
ATP binding|ephrin receptor activity|integral to







plasma membrane|membrane|protein amino acid







phosphorylation|receptor activity|signal







transduction|transferase activity|transmembrane







receptor protein tyrosine kinase signaling pathway


miR-21
BE888593
FLJ11220
hypothetical protein
P + T





FLJ11220


miR-21
NM_017637
FLJ20043
hypothetical protein
P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|zinc ion binding





FLJ20043


miR-21
AF019214
HBP1
HMG-box containing
M + P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





protein 1

DNA-dependent


miR-21
NM_000214
JAG1
jagged 1 (Alagille
M + P + T
Notch binding|Notch signaling





syndrome)

pathway|angiogenesis|calcium ion binding|calcium







ion binding|cell communication|cell fate







determination|development|endothelial cell







differentiation|extracellular region|growth factor







activity|hemopoiesis|integral to plasma







membrane|keratinocyte







differentiation|membrane|myoblast







differentiation|neurogenesis|regulation of cell







migration|regulation of cell proliferation|structural







molecule activity


miR-21
NM_002232
KCNA3
potassium voltage-gated
M + P + T
cation transport|delayed rectifier potassium channel





channel, shaker-related

activity|integral to membrane|membrane|membrane





subfamily, member 3

fraction|potassium ion transport|voltage-gated







potassium channel complex


miR-21
NM_014766
KIAA0193
KIAA0193 gene
P + T
cellular_component unknown|dipeptidase





product

activity|exocytosis|proteolysis and peptidolysis


miR-21
NM_014912
KIAA0940
KIAA0940 protein
M + P + T
nucleic acid binding


miR-21
NM_014952
KIAA0945
KIAA0945 protein
P + T
DNA binding


miR-21
NM_017780
KIAA1416
KIAA1416 protein
P + T
ATP binding|chromatin|chromatin assembly or







disassembly|chromatin binding|helicase







activity|nucleus


miR-21
AB040901
KIAA1468
KIAA1468 protein
P + T
binding|mitotic chromosome condensation


miR-21
U90268
Krit1
cerebral cavernous
M + P
binding|catalytic activity|cytoskeleton|small GTPase





malformations 1

mediated signal transduction|small GTPase regulator







activity


miR-21
BF591611
LOC147632
hypothetical protein
P + T
oxidoreductase activity|zinc ion binding





BC010734


miR-21
NM_005904
MADH7
MAD, mothers against
P + T
intracellular|protein binding|receptor signaling protein





decapentaplegic

serine/threonine kinase signaling protein





homolog 7 (Drosophila)

activity|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|response to







stress|transcription|transforming growth factor beta







receptor signaling pathway|transforming growth







factor beta receptor, inhibitory cytoplasmic mediator







activity


miR-21
NM_025146
MAK3P
likely ortholog of
P + T
N-acetyltransferase activity





mouse Mak3p homolog





(S. cerevisiae)


miR-21
NM_014319
MAN1
integral inner nuclear
P + T
integral to membrane|integral to nuclear inner





membrane protein

membrane|membrane fraction|nuclear







membrane|nucleotide binding


miR-21
AW025150
MAP3K12
mitogen-activated
M + T
ATP binding|JNK cascade|cytoplasm|magnesium ion





protein kinase kinase

binding|plasma membrane|protein amino acid





kinase 12

phosphorylation|protein kinase cascade|protein







serine/threonine kinase activity|protein-tyrosine







kinase activity|transferase activity


miR-21
NM_012325
MAPRE1
microtubule-associated
P + T
cell proliferation|cytokinesis|microtubule





protein, RP/EB family,

binding|mitosis|protein C-terminus binding|regulation





member 1

of cell cycle


miR-21
NM_002380
MATN2
matrilin 2
P + T
biological_process unknown|calcium ion







binding|extracellular matrix (sensu Metazoa)


miR-21
NM_018834
MATR3
matrin 3
M + P + T
RNA binding|nuclear inner membrane|nucleotide







binding|nucleus|structural molecule activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-21
NM_021038
MBNL1
muscleblind-like
M + P + T
cytoplasm|double-stranded RNA binding|embryonic





(Drosophila)

development (sensu Mammalia)|embryonic limb







morphogenesis|muscle development|myoblast







differentiation|neurogenesis|nucleic acid







binding|nucleus|nucleus


miR-21
AI139252
MGC16063
ribosomal protein L35a
P + T
JAK-STAT cascadelacute-phase response|calcium ion







binding|cell







motility|cytoplasm|hematopoietin/interferon-class







(D200-domain) cytokine receptor signal transducer







activity|intracellular signaling cascade|negative







regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|neurogenesis|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transducer







activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-21
BC004162
MGC2452
hypothetical protein
P + T
fatty acid metabolism|generation of precursor





MGC2452

metabolites and energy|ligand-dependent nuclear







receptor activity|lipid







metabolism|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|steroid hormone







receptor activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-21
NM_024052
MGC3048
hypothetical protein
P + T





MGC3048


miR-21
AB049636
MRPL9
mitochondrial
P + T
mitochondrion|protein





ribosomal protein L9

biosynthesis|ribosome|structural constituent of







ribosome


miR-21
NM_015678
NBEA
neurobeachin
P + T
Golgi trans face|cytosol|endomembrane







system|plasma membrane|post-Golgi







transport|postsynaptic membrane|protein kinase A







binding


miR-21
AI700518
NFIB
nuclear factor I/B
M + T
DNA replication|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-21
NM_002527
NTF3
neurotrophin 3
M + P
anti-apoptosis|cell motility|cell-cell signaling|growth







factor activity|neurogenesis|signal transduction


miR-21
U24223
PCBP1
poly(rC) binding
M + P + T
RNA binding|catalytic activity|cytoplasm|mRNA





protein 1

metabolism|nucleus|ribonucleoprotein







complex|single-stranded DNA binding


miR-21
NM_005016
PCBP2
poly(rC) binding
M + T
DNA binding|RNA binding|cytoplasm|mRNA





protein 2

metabolism|nucleic acid







binding|nucleus|ribonucleoprotein complex


miR-21
NM_014456
PDCD4
programmed cell death
P + T
apoptosis





4 (neoplastic





transformation





inhibitor)


miR-21
AF338650
PDZD2
PDZ domain containing 2
P + T


miR-21
NM_000325
PITX2
paired-like
M + P + T
determination of left/right





homeodomain

symmetry|development|nucleus|organogenesis|





transcription factor 2

regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent|







transcription factor activity


miR-21
NM_002655
PLAG1
pleiomorphic adenoma
P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|transcription factor





gene 1

activity|zinc ion binding


miR-21
NM_005036
PPARA
peroxisome
P + T
fatty acid metabolism|generation of precursor





proliferative activated

metabolites and energy|ligand-dependent nuclear





receptor, alpha

receptor activity|lipid







metabolism|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|steroid hormone







receptor activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity|transcription from







RNA polymerase II promoter


miR-21
NM_002711
PPP1R3A
protein phosphatase 1,
P + T
carbohydrate metabolism|glycogen





regulatory (inhibitor)

metabolism|hydrolase activity|integral to





subunit 3A (glycogen

membrane|phosphoprotein phosphatase activity|type 1





and sarcoplasmic

serine/threonine specific protein phosphatase inhibitor





reticulum binding

activity





subunit, skeletal





muscle)


miR-21
NM_000944
PPP3CA
protein phosphatase 3
P + T
calcineurin complex|calcium ion binding|calmodulin





(formerly 2B), catalytic

binding|hydrolase activity|protein amino acid





subunit, alpha isoform

dephosphorylation|protein serine/threonine





(calcineurin A alpha)

phosphatase activity


miR-21
NM_018569
PRO0971 hypothetical protein
P + T





PRO0971


miR-21
AA156948
PRPF4B
PRP4 pre-mRNA
M + T
ATP binding|RNA splicing|nuclear mRNA splicing,





processing factor 4

via spliceosome|nucleus|protein amino acid





homolog B (yeast)

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|transferase activity


miR-21
BF337790
PURB
purine-rich element
M + P + T





binding protein B


miR-21
NM_002869
RAB6A
RAB6A, member RAS
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|Golgi apparatus|protein





oncogene family

transport|small GTPase mediated signal transduction


miR-21
AL136727
RAB6C
RAB6C, member RAS
P + T
GTP binding|GTPase activity|intracellular|protein





oncogene family

transport|response to drug|small GTPase mediated







signal transduction


miR-21
NM_002890
RASA1
RAS p21 protein
P + T
Ras GTPase activator activity|intracellular signaling





activator (GTPase

cascade





activating protein) 1


miR-21
NM_005739
RASGRP1
RAS guanyl releasing
P + T
Ras guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activity|Ras





protein 1 (calcium and

protein signal transduction|calcium ion





DAG-regulated)

binding|calcium ion binding|diacylglycerol







binding|guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor







activity|membrane fraction|small GTPase mediated







signal transduction


miR-21
NM_021111
RECK
reversion-inducing-
M + P + T
cell cycle|membrane|membrane





cysteine-rich protein

fraction|metalloendopeptidase inhibitor





with kazal motifs

activity|negative regulation of cell cycle|serine-type







endopeptidase inhibitor activity


miR-21
NM_006915
RP2
retinitis pigmentosa 2
P + T
beta-tubulin folding|membrane|sensory





(X-linked recessive)

perception|unfolded protein binding|visual perception


miR-21
AA906056
RPS6KA3
ribosomal protein S6
M + T
ATP binding|central nervous system





kinase, 90 kDa,

development|protein amino acid





polypeptide 3

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|signal transduction|skeletal







development|transferase activity


miR-21
NM_002971
SATB1
special AT-rich
M + P + T
double-stranded DNA binding|establishment and/or





sequence binding

maintenance of chromatin





protein 1 (binds to

architecture|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





nuclear matrix/scaffold-

dependent|transcription factor activity





associating DNA's)


miR-21
NM_014191
SCN8A
sodium channel, voltage
M + P + T
ATP binding|cation channel activity|cation





gated, type VIII, alpha

transport|integral to





polypeptide

membrane|membrane|neurogenesis|sodium ion







transport|voltage-gated sodium channel







activity|voltage-gated sodium channel complex


miR-21
AA927480
SKI
v-ski sarcoma viral
M + P + T





oncogene homolog





(avian)


miR-21
NM_003983
SLC7A6
solute carrier family 7
P + T
amino acid metabolism|amino acid transport|amino





(cationic amino acid

acid-polyamine transporter activity|integral to plasma





transporter, y+ system),

membrane|plasma membrane|protein complex





member 6

assembly|transport


miR-21
NM_006359
SLC9A6
solute carrier family 9
P + T
antiporter activity|endoplasmic reticulum





(sodium/hydrogen

membrane|integral to membrane|integral to





exchanger), isoform 6

membrane|ion







transport|microsome|mitochondrion|regulation of







pH|sodium ion transport|sodium:hydrogen antiporter







activity|solute:hydrogen antiporter activity


miR-21
NM_003076
SMARCD1
SWI/SNF related,
P + T
chromatin remodeling|chromatin remodeling





matrix associated, actin

complex|regulation of transcription from RNA





dependent regulator of

polymerase II promoter|transcription coactivator





chromatin, subfamily d,

activity





member 1


miR-21
AI669815
SOX2
SRY (sex determining
P + T
establishment and/or maintenance of chromatin





region Y)-box 2

architecture|nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-







dependent|transcription|transcription factor activity


miR-21
NM_006940
SOX5
SRY (sex determining
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





region Y)-box 5

dependent|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter


miR-21
AI808807
SOX7
SRY (sex determining
P + T
DNA binding|nucleus|regulation of transcription,





region Y)-box 7

DNA-dependent|transcription


miR-21
NM_006717
SPIN
Spindling
P + T
gametogenesis|ribonucleoprotein complex


miR-21
NM_005842
SPRY2
sprouty homolog 2
P + T
cell-cell





(Drosophila)

signaling|development|membrane|organogenesis|







regulation of signal transduction


miR-21
NM_006751
SSFA2
sperm specific antigen 2
P + T
plasma membrane


miR-21
NM_006603
STAG2
stromal antigen 2
P + T
cell cycle|chromosome







segregation|cytokinesis|meiosis|mitosis|







molecular_function unknown|nucleus


miR-21
BC000627
STAT3
signal transducer and
P + T
JAK-STAT cascade|acute-phase response|calcium ion





activator of

binding|cell





transcription 3 (acute-

motility|cytoplasm|hematopoietin/interferon-class





phase response factor)

(D200-domain) cytokine receptor signal transducer







activity|intracellular signaling cascade|negative







regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II







promoter|neurogenesis|nucleus|nucleus|regulation of







transcription, DNA-dependent|signal transducer







activity|transcription|transcription factor







activity|transcription factor activity


miR-21
AW138827
TAF5
TAF5 RNA polymerase
P + T
nucleus|regulation of transcription, DNA-





II, TATA box binding

dependent|transcription factor TFIID





protein (TBP)-

complex|transcription factor activity





associated factor,





100 kDa


miR-21
BF591040
TAGAP
T-cell activation
P + T
GTPase activator activity





GTPase activating





protein


miR-21
NM_000358
TGFBI
transforming growth
M + P + T
cell adhesion|cell proliferation|extracellular matrix





factor, beta-induced,

(sensu Metazoa)|extracellular space|integrin





68 kDa

binding|negative regulation of cell adhesion|protein







binding|sensory perception|visual perception


miR-21
NM_000362
TIMP3
tissue inhibitor of
P + T
enzyme inhibitor activity|extracellular matrix (sensu





metalloproteinase 3

Metazoa)|extracellular matrix (sensu





(Sorsby fundus

Metazoa)|induction of apoptosis by extracellular





dystrophy,

signals|metalloendopeptidase inhibitor





pseudoinflammatory)

activity|sensory perception|visual perception


miR-21
AA149745
TRIM2
tripartite motif-
M + P + T
cytoplasm|myosin binding|protein





containing 2

ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase complex|ubiquitin-







protein ligase activity|zinc ion binding


miR-21
AF346629
TRPM7
transient receptor
P + T
ATP binding|calcium channel activity|calcium ion





potential cation

transport|cation transport|integral to





channel, subfamily M,

membrane|membrane|protein amino acid





member 7

phosphorylation|protein serine/threonine kinase







activity|transferase activity


miR-21
AI745185
YAP1
Yes-associated protein
P + T





1, 65 kDa


miR-21
NM_005667
ZFP103
zinc finger protein 103
P + T
central nervous system development|integral to





homolog (mouse)

membrane|protein ubiquitination|ubiquitin ligase







complex|ubiquitin-protein ligase activity|zinc ion







binding


miR-21
N62196
ZNF367
zinc finger protein 367
M + P + T
nucleic acid binding|nucleus|zinc ion binding





M = MiRanda


P = PicTar


T = TargetScan






Example 3
Bio-Pathological Features and microRNA Expression

Materials and Methods


Immunohistochemical Analysis of Breast Cancer Samples.


Staining procedures were performed as described (Querzoli, P., et al., Anal. Quant. Cytol. Histol. 21:151-160 (1999)). Hormonal receptors were evaluated with 6F11 antibody for estrogen receptor α (ER) and PGR-1A6 antibody for progesterone receptor (PR) (Ventana, Tucson, Ariz., U.S.A.). The proliferation index was assessed with MIB1 antibody (DAKO, Copenhagen). ERBB2 was detected with CB11 antibody (Ventana, Tucson, Ariz., U.S.A.) and p53 protein expression was examined with DO7 antibody (Ventana, Tucson, Ariz., U.S.A.). Only tumor cells with distinct nuclear immunostaining for ER, PR, Mib1 and p53 were recorded as positive. Tumor cells were considered positive for ERBB2 when they showed distinct membrane immunoreactivity.


To perform a quantitative analysis of the expression of these various biological markers, the Eureka Menarini computerized image analysis system was used. For each tumor section, at least 20 microscopic fields of invasive carcinoma were measured using a 40× objective. The following cut-off values were employed: 10% of positive nuclear area for ER, PR, c-erbB2 and p53, 13% of nuclei expressing Mib1 was introduced to discriminate cases with high and low proliferative activity.


Results


To evaluate whether a correlation exists between various bio-pathological features associated with breast cancer and the expression of particular miRNAs, we generated and compared miRNA expression profiles for various cancer samples associated with the presence or absence of a particular breast cancer feature. In particular, we analyzed breast cancers with lobular or ductal histotypes, breast cancers with differential expression of either estrogen receptor alpha (ER) or progesterone receptor, and breast cancers with differences in lymph node metastasis, vascular invasion, proliferation index, and expression of ERBB2 and p53.


Expression profiles of lobular or ductal and +/−ERBB2 expression classes did not reveal any microRNAs that were differentially-expressed, while all other comparisons revealed a small number of differentially-expressed microRNAs (P<0.05). The results of this analysis are shown in FIG. 4.


Differentially-expressed miRNA families were identified for various bio-pathological features that are associated with human breast cancer. For example, all miR-30 miRNAs are down-regulated in both ER- and PR-tumors, suggesting that expression of miR-30 miRNAs is regulated by these hormones. In addition, the expression of various let-7 miRNAs was down-regulated in breast cancer samples with either lymph node metastasis or a high proliferation index, suggesting that reduced let-7 expression could be associated with a poor prognosis, a result that is consistent with previous findings. The discovery that the let-7 family of miRNAs regulates the expression of members of the RAS oncogene family provides a potential explanation for the role of let-7 miRNAs in human cancer.


miR-145 and miR-21, two miRNAs whose expression could differentiate cancer or normal tissues, were also differentially-expressed in cancers with a different proliferation index or different tumor stage. In particular, miR-145 is progressively down-regulated from normal breast to cancers with a high proliferation index. Similarly, miR-21 is progressively up-regulated from normal breast to cancers with high tumor stage. These findings suggest that deregulation of these two miRNAs may affect critical molecular events involved in tumor progression.


Another miRNA potentially involved in cancer progression is miR-9-3. miR-9-3 was downregulated in breast cancers with either high vascular invasion or lymph node metastasis, suggesting that its down-regulation was acquired during the course of tumor progression and, in particular, during the acquisition of metastatic potential.


The relevant teachings of all publications cited herein that have not explicitly been incorporated by reference, are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims

Claims
  • 1. A method of diagnosing a breast cancer associated with one or more prognostic markers in a subject, comprising: measuring the level of at least one miR gene product in a breast cancer sample from said subject,wherein an alteration in the level of the at least one miR gene product in the test sample, relative to the level of a corresponding miR gene product in a control sample, is indicative of the subject having a breast cancer associated with the one or more prognostic markers,wherein the breast cancer associated with one or more prognostic markers and the at least one miR gene product are selected from the group consisting of:(i) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with estrogen receptor expression and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-26a, miR-26b, miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-30a-5p, miR-30b, miR-30c, miR-30d, miR-185, miR-191, miR-206, miR-212, and combinations thereof;(ii) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with progesterone receptor expression and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of let-7c, miR-26a, miR-29b, miR-30a-5p, miR-30b, miR-30c, miR-30d, and combinations thereof;(iii) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with positive lymph node metastasis and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of let-7f-1, let-7a-3, let-7a-2, miR-9-3, and combinations thereof;(iv) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with a high proliferative index and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of let-7c, let-7d, miR-26a, miR-26b, miR-30a-5p, miR-102, miR-145, and combinations thereof;(v) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with detectable p53 expression and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-16a, miR-128b and a combination thereof;(vi) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with high vascular invasion and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-9-3, miR-10b, miR-27a, miR-29a, miR-123, miR-205 and combinations thereof; and(vii) the breast cancer is a breast cancer associated with an advanced tumor stage and the miR gene product is selected from the group consisting of miR-9-2, miR-15-a, miR-21, miR-30a-s, miR-133a-1, miR-137, miR-153-2, miR-154, miR-181a, miR-203, miR-213, and combinations thereof.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: administering, to the subject, a pharmaceutical composition for treating breast cancer, wherein the pharmaceutical composition comprises: at least one miR expression inhibitor compound or at least one miR gene product and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier.
  • 3. The method of claim 1, comprising: reverse transcribing RNA from a test sample obtained from the subject to provide a set of target oligodeoxynucleotides;hybridizing the target oligodeoxynucleotides to a microarray comprising miRNA-specific probe oligonucleotides to provide a hybridization profile for the test sample; andcomparing the test sample hybridization profile to a hybridization profile generated from a control sample,wherein an alteration in the signal of at least one miRNA is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, breast cancer.
  • 4. A method of treating breast cancer in a subject who has a breast cancer in which at least one miR gene product is down-regulated or up-regulated in the cancer cells of the subject relative to control cells, comprising: (1) when the at least one miR gene product is down-regulated in the cancer cells, administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one isolated miR gene product, provided that the miR gene product is not miR-15a or miR-16-1, such that proliferation of cancer cells in the subject is inhibited; or(2) when the at least one miR gene product is up-regulated in the cancer cells, administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one compound for inhibiting expression of the at least one miR gene product, such that proliferation of cancer cells in the subject is inhibited.
  • 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the at least one isolated miR gene product in step (1) is selected from the group consisting of miR-145, miR-10b, miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, miR-101-1, miR-143 and combinations thereof.
  • 6. The method of claim 4 wherein the at least one miR gene product in step (2) is selected from the group consisting of: miR-21, miR-155, miR-009-1 (miR131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-213, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210, miR-213 and combinations thereof.
  • 7. The method of claim 4, further comprising: determining the amount of at least one miR gene product in breast cancer cells, relative to control cells; andaltering the amount of miR gene product expressed in the breast cancer cells by:(i) administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one isolated miR gene product, provided that the miR gene product is not miR-15a or miR-16-1, if the amount of the miR gene product expressed in the cancer cells is less than the amount of the miR gene product expressed in control cells; or(ii) administering to the subject an effective amount of at least one compound for inhibiting expression of the at least one miR gene product, if the amount of the miR gene product expressed in the cancer cells is greater than the amount of the miR gene product expressed in control cells,such that proliferation of cancer cells in the subject is inhibited.
  • 8. The method of claim 7, wherein the at least one isolated miR gene product in step (i) is selected from the group consisting of: miR-145, miR-10b, miR-123 (miR-126), miR-140-as, miR-125a, miR-125b-1, miR-125b-2, miR-194, miR-204, let-7a-2, let-7a-3, let-7d (let-7d-v1), let-7f-2, miR-101-1, miR-143 and combinations thereof.
  • 9. The method of claim 7, wherein the at least one miR gene product in step (ii) is selected from the group consisting of miR-21, miR-155, miR-009-1 (miR-131-1), miR-34 (miR-170), miR-102 (miR-29b), miR-213, let-7i (let-7d-v2), miR-122a, miR-128b, miR-136, miR-149, miR-191, miR-196-1, miR-196-2, miR-202, miR-203, miR-206, miR-210, miR-213 and combinations thereof.
  • 10. A pharmaceutical composition for treating breast cancer, comprising at least one isolated miR gene product of claim 8 and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier.
  • 11. A pharmaceutical composition for treating breast cancer, comprising at least one miR expression inhibitor compound of claim 9, and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier.
  • 12. A method of diagnosing whether a subject has, or is at risk for developing, breast cancer, comprising measuring the level of at least one miR-125b gene product in a test sample from said subject,wherein a decrease in the level of the miR-125b gene product in the test sample, relative to the level of a corresponding miR-155 gene product in a control sample, is indicative of the subject either having, or being at risk for developing, breast cancer.
  • 13. The method of claim 12, which further comprises measuring at least one miR-125b-1 gene product.
  • 14. The method of claim 12, which further comprises measuring at least one miR-125b-2 gene product.
  • 15. The method of claim 12, which further comprises measuring at least one miR-10b gene product.
  • 16. The method of claim 12, which further comprises measuring at least one miR-145 gene product.
  • 17. The method of claim 12, which further comprises measuring at least one miR-21 gene product.
  • 18. The method of claim 12, wherein the level of the at least one miR-125b gene product is measured using Northern blot analysis.
  • 19. The method of claim 12, wherein the level of the at least one miR-125b gene product in the test sample is less than the level of the corresponding miR-125b gene product in the control sample.
  • 20. The method of claim 12, wherein the level of the at least one miR-125b gene product in the test sample is greater than the level of the corresponding miR-125b gene product in the control sample.
  • 21. A method of treating cancer in a subject in need thereof, comprising administering to the subject an effective amount of a compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding one or more gene products in the subject, wherein the gene products are selected from one or more of miR-155, miR-10b, and miR-125b;thereby inhibiting the proliferation of cancer cells in the subject.
  • 22. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is an antisense nucleic acid.
  • 23. The method of claim 21, wherein the antisense nucleic acid is selected from the group consisting of a single-stranded RNA, a single-stranded DNA, a single-stranded RNA-DNA chimera and a single-stranded PNA.
  • 24. The method of claim 21, wherein the antisense nucleic acid contains one or more modifications to the nucleic acid backbone, a sugar moiety, a base moiety or a combination thereof.
  • 25. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is a double-stranded RNA molecule having at least 90% sequence homology with the mature miRNAs of: miR-10b in SEQ ID NO:31, miR-125b-1 in SEQ ID NO: 118, miR-125b-2 in SEQ ID NO: 121, and miR-155 in SEQ ID NO:183.
  • 26. The method of claim 25, wherein the double-stranded RNA molecule is about 17 to about 29 nucleotides in length.
  • 27. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of the gene encoding the gene product is a ribozyme.
  • 28. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is formulated as a pharmaceutical composition comprising the compound or a pharmaceutically-acceptable salt thereof, and a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier.
  • 29. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is administered to the subject orally, parenterally, by injection or infusion.
  • 30. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is administered to the subject by direct injection into a tumor in the subject.
  • 31. The method of claim 21, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is administered in combination with a delivery reagent.
  • 32. The method of claim 31, wherein the delivery reagent is a liposome.
  • 33. The method of claim 21, wherein the nucleic acid encoding the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding the gene product is a recombinant plasmid or viral vector.
  • 34. A method for inhibiting the proliferation of cancer cells, comprising administering a compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding a miR-155 gene product to the cancer cells, thereby arresting or slowing the growth of the cancer cells.
  • 35. The method of claim 34, wherein the compound for inhibiting the expression of a gene encoding a miR-155 gene product is an antisense nucleic acid.
  • 36. A method for inhibiting the proliferation of cancer cells, comprising administering a compound for increasing the expression of a gene encoding one or more of a miR-10b, miR-125b-1 or miR-125b-2 gene product to the cancer cells, thereby arresting or slowing the growth of the cancer cells.
  • 37. The method of claim 36, wherein the compound for increasing the expression of a gene encoding one or more of a miR-10b, miR-125b-1 or miR-125b-2g gene product is a sense nucleic acid.
  • 38. A method of treating a subject with a breast cancer, comprising: i) selecting a subject with the breast cancer; and, ii) administering to the subject an isolated nucleic acid molecule encoding at least one transcript of: miR-155, miR-10b, miR-125b-1, and miR-125b-2, thereby treating the subject.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional application claiming the benefit of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/012,235, now U.S. Pat. No. ______, issued ______, 2014, which entered the National Phase on Jan. 31, 2008, from the International PCT Application No. US06/029889, filed Jul. 31, 2006, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/704,464, filed Aug. 1, 2005. The disclosures of each of the aforementioned applications are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.

GOVERNMENT SUPPORT

This invention was supported by a grant under Program Project Grant P01CA76259, P01CA81534, and P30CA56036 from the National Cancer Institute. The Government has certain rights in this invention.

Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60704464 Aug 2005 US
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 12012235 Jan 2008 US
Child 14145364 US
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent PCT/US2006/029889 Jul 2006 US
Child 12012235 US