This study sheds light on the tumour-suppressive role of TINCR in PANC-1 cells and suggests its potential as a therapeutic target. These results shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying the impact of TINCR on pancreatic cancer and offer promising opportunities for innovative therapeutic strategies to improve outcomes in this serious malignancy.
By controlling the miR-375/ATG7 axis, the lncRNA TINCR impacts the proliferation and invasion of liver cancer cells. Therefore, the lncRNA TINCR/miR-375/ATG7 signaling axis could be a novel biological target for the diagnosis and therapy of liver cancer.
Moreover, overexpression of miR-29C suppressed the role of overexpression of PLAC2 in cell proliferation and cell cycle progression. In conclusion, PLAC2 upregulates CDK6 by downregulating miR-29C to promote LSCC cell proliferation.
LncRNA PLAC2 and miR-96 directly interacted with each other, while they failed to regulate the expression of each other. In conclusion, lncRNA PLAC2 negatively regulates the chemosensitivity of HCC cells to cisplatin, possibly by sponging miR-96 to upregulate miR-96.
Our finding indicated that there existed a TINCR/miR-195-3p/ST6GAL1/NF-κB signaling regulatory axis that regulated tumor progression and oxaliplatin resistance, which might be exploited for anticancer therapy in HCC.