My lab works on studying microRNAs, and we have known for decades that microRNAs are depleted in cancer. However, the mechanism as to how these microRNAs are lost has not been actively understood. Our recent work on extracellular vesicles suggests that microRNA that are depleted in cancer are being actively loaded into these extracellular vesicles.
Our goal now is to really get to the mechanism as to how these RNAs are actively loaded into these extracellular vesicles in the process of tumor genesis. The protocol helps understand and capture the dynamic process of microRNAs release into extracellular vesicles, which is one of the challenging areas in studying extracellular vesicle biology. Our findings provide a tool to advance the study of pathways that regulate depletion of microRNAs in cancer.
We plan on identifying functional and phenotypic consequences of the loss of specific subsets of microRNA via extracellular vesicles in cancer. Once we identify the factors that are involved in loading these microRNAs into extracellular vesicles, our goal is to down-regulate these factors and evaluate the phenotypic consequence. Moreover, because we identified a motif that's contained in these small RNAs, we're curious to know whether this motif is both necessary and sufficient for loading these RNAs into the extracellular vesicles.