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Multitarget microRNA sponge for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: Simultaneous targeting of miR-21, miR-155, and miR-18a.

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The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2026 Vol.393(5) p. 104325
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Karimi M, Motamed N, Shafizadeh A, Mardani P, Arefian E

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Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma remains one of the most lethal malignancies with only an 11% 5-year survival rate.

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APA Karimi M, Motamed N, et al. (2026). Multitarget microRNA sponge for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: Simultaneous targeting of miR-21, miR-155, and miR-18a.. The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, 393(5), 104325. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpet.2026.104325
MLA Karimi M, et al.. "Multitarget microRNA sponge for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma: Simultaneous targeting of miR-21, miR-155, and miR-18a.." The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, vol. 393, no. 5, 2026, pp. 104325.
PMID 42025150

Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma remains one of the most lethal malignancies with only an 11% 5-year survival rate. Oncogenic microRNAs (miRNA), particularly miR-21, miR-155, and miR-18a, drive tumor progression by silencing tumor suppressors and promoting chemoresistance. Single-target miRNA inhibition has shown limited clinical efficacy because of complex network redundancy and compensatory pathway activation, necessitating multitarget therapeutic approaches. We designed and validated a trispecific miRNA sponge construct containing high-affinity target sites for all 3 oncomiRs, demonstrated in silico through miRNAsong analysis with an approximately 11-kcal/mol thermodynamic specificity gap relative to off-targets. The sponge was functionally tested in the human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cell lines PANC-1 and AsPC-1 using comprehensive assays including dual-luciferase reporter, quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, flow cytometry-based apoptosis analysis, scratch-wound migration, and gemcitabine chemosensitization studies. In AsPC-1 cells, the trispecific sponge achieved 99.0%-99.9% silencing of target miRNAs and 349-fold reporter reduction, inducing a 6.1-fold increase in apoptosis and approximately 44% reduction in wound closure at 72 hours compared with nontargeting controls. PANC-1 cells showed moderate but significant responses with 65%-98% miRNA silencing, a 2.2-fold increase in apoptosis, and approximately 51% reduction in wound closure at 72 hours under identical assay conditions. Mechanistically, simultaneous miRNA inhibition synergistically reactivated tumor suppressor genes PDCD4, ESR1, and NOTCH2 (6.3-7.7-fold upregulation) and sensitized chemoresistant cells to gemcitabine by 1.5- to 1.8-fold. Across the evaluated functional endpoints, the trispecific sponge conferred approximately 1.2- to 95-fold changes relative to the nontargeting control and, in many instances, elicited equal or greater effects than single-target constructs, consistent with a broader network-level impact rather than uniform superiority in every assay. This platform represents a promising strategy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma therapy warranting preclinical development and clinical translation. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Pancreatic cancer chemoresistance drives poor survival. The trispecific microRNA sponge simultaneously targets miR-21, miR-155, and miR-18a, synergistically reactivating tumor suppressors and enhancing gemcitabine efficacy more than single-target approaches. This multitarget microRNA strategy represents a novel therapeutic platform for overcoming chemoresistance in pancreatic cancer.

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