miR-133b, a particular member of myomiRs, coming into playing its unique pathological role in human cancer

MicroRNAs, a family of single-stranded and non-coding RNAs, play a crucial role in regulating gene expression at posttranscriptional level, by which it can mediate various types of physiological and pathological process in normal developmental progress and human disease, including cancer. The microRNA-133b originally defined as canonical muscle-specific microRNAs considering their function to the development and health of mammalian skeletal and cardiac muscles, but new findings coming from our group and others revealed that miR-133b have frequently abnormal expression in various kinds of human cancer and its complex complicated regulatory networks affects the tumorigenicity and development of malignant tumors. Very few existing reviews on miR-133b, until now, are principally about its role in homologous cluster (miR-1, −133 and -206s), however, most of constantly emerging new researches now are focused mainly on one of them, so In this article, to highlight the unique pathological role of miR-133b playing in tumor, we conduct a review to summarize the current understanding about one of the muscle-specific microRNAs, namely miR-133b, acting in human cancer. The review focused on the following four aspects: the overview of miR-133b, the target genes of miR-133b involved in human cancer, the expression of miR-133b and regulatory mechanisms leading to abnormal expression of miR-133b.


INTRODUCTION
MicroRNAs (miRs) are endogenous short noncoding RNA molecules (containing about 22 nucleotides) found in various species, which functions in degradation and translational inhibition by perfect of imperfect complementarities with specific sequences of mRNA [1,2], in this manner a single miR can regulate a large amount of independent targeted gene and involve in a variety of physiological and biochemistry process including diverse cellular signaling and metabolic pathways, as well as basic cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis. In addition, abnormal miRs expression is a hallmark of several diseases, including cancer [3,4]. Some miRs, per se, have a substantial influence on disease progresses and been extensively studied and characterized, such as the canonical myomiR-133b. miR-133b belong to canonical muscle-specific microRNAs (myomiR) families(miR-1, -133 and -206s) and was initially considered muscle specific in that it was highly enriched in heart and skeletal muscle and played a critical regulator for muscle development and remodeling [5,6]. But now more and more researches coming from our group and others indicated that miR-133b presented aberrant expression in various kinds of human cancer and might be closely associated with the occurrence and development of tumor.
Until now, there are 3 available reviews about miR-133b in English bibliographic databases. they are "Roles of the canonical myomiRs miR-1, -133 and -206 in cell development and disease" [6], "microRNA-133: expression, function and therapeutic potential in muscle diseases and cancer" [7] and "microRNA-1/133a Review and microRNA-206/133b clusters:Dysregulation and functional roles in human cancers" [5] ,respectively. However, discussions from these excellent reviews are mainly centered on the role of miR-133b in homologous cluster (miR-1, -133 and -206s) and sometimes its unique physiological functions are harder to distinguish and to be highlighted extremely well. Furthermore, most of researches springing up now in our group and others are focused mainly on one of myomiR and simultaneously found different myomiR isomer genes to be independently expressed under cell specific regulation, even discrepancy can occur in single myomiR. Therefore, in order to avoid ambiguous identification and highlight the unique pathological properties of miR-133b playing in human cancer, we made a review only for miR-133b. Firstly, we introduced the general situation of miR-133b, and then summarized the current understanding about functional significance and the aberrant expression of miR-133b acting in human cancer.

The overview of miR-133b
MicroRNA families miR-1 and miR-133, and single miR-206 are collectively known as the musclespecific miRNAs ("myomiRs") because of they are highly conserved in the musculatures across species [8]. miR-133b and miR-206, two isomers of miR-1 and miR-133a form different clusters located in on chromosomes 6p12.2 ,20q13.33 and 18q11.2, respectively. Although these miRs have the same specificity of tissue expression, mature miRNA sequence present variant nucleotiedes ( Figure 1A shows the representative gene structure of miR-133b/miR-206 clusters and each mature miRNA sequence), this also explains to a certain extent its function may be different . Recently, burgeoning literatures have found that these gene clusters also play an import role in human cancer apart from muscle tissue. To avoid the repetition and encumbrance of related contents, and help focus on unique pathological role of miR-133b in cancer, more minute details about myomiRs can be found in these excellent review papers [5,6,9]. For a more comprehensive understanding the latest updates and condition of miR-133b properties in cancer regulatory networks and tumor biology, Firstly, we performed an extremely simple mathematical analysis. Literature searches (Pubmed) in the Figure 1B have showed the research proportion of 4 different myomiRs in all literatures and in article on cancer, year distribution of miR-133b with cancer was presented in Figure 1C, which indicated the study of miR-133b is proportionately less and growing annually, remarkably, it seem that more research of miR-133b is about caner. At the same time, we also analyzed the proportion of miR-133b in various cancers, and research categories of miR-133b involved in tumor, the result indicated that the majority of the study about miR-133b focuses on pathomechanism and digestive tract neoplasms ( Figure 1D and 1E). In addition, another original intention for this review is that there has been individual review for each myomiRs but miR-133b, these independent reviews about miR-133 [7]/a [10], miR-1 [11][12][13], miR-206 [14,15] and miR-133b which we review in here is so particularly important for us to understand the jointly or independently role of myomiRs acting in human disease.

The target genes of miR-133b involved in human cancer
Because microRNA perform functions mainly depending on the way that miRNA suppresses the translation and stability of target genes by binding to the 3ʹ-UTRs of target mRNAs, so first we focus on all target genes of miR-133b. In order to increase reliability, the experimentally validated genes (compiled from miRTarBase 6.0 [16], DIANA-TarBase v7.0 [17]) and predicted targets supported by CLIP-Seq data (compiled from starBase v2.0 [18]) were used in this review. As showed in Figure 2A, Figure 2B and Supplementary Table 1, 725 target genes eventually are selected. Enrichment analysis of KEGG pathway and OMIM Disease were performed through Enricher [19], the result showed that several pathway and diseases on cancer, including "Proteoglycans in cancer", "Pathways in cancer", "Central carbon metabolism in cancer", "breast cancer" and "ovarian cancer", are among the statistically enriched categories ( Figure 2C, Figure 2D and Supplementary Table 2). The miRNA-mRNA interactions indicated miR-133b play a central role in human cancer.

Modulatory effect of miR-133b in cancer cell proliferation and apoptosis
Sustaining proliferative signaling and resisting cell death are the most fundamental trait acquired during the cascade process of human tumors [20], the dysregulation of expression of miR-133b in cancers is often associated with these biological features via the deregulation of various validated gene target ( Figure 3C), Table 1. Tumor necrosis-factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a member of the TNF-superfamily that selectively induces apoptosis through death receptors (DRs) 4 and/or 5 in cancer cells, however, cancer cells can evade TRAIL-induced apoptosis by acquiring TRAIL-resistance [21]. Using α-mangostin, which is a xanthone derivative, to treat TRAIL-resistant human colon cancer DLD-1 cell line and breast epithelial proliferating MCF10A and found that α-mangostin curb the expression of miR-133b and relieve inhibition of miR-133b on its target gene DR5, which canceled the resistance and effectively induced the translocation of DR5 to the cancer cell surface membrane in TRAILresistant DLD-1 cells [22]. The difference is that miR-133b can caused exacerbated proapoptotic responses to TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) in HeLa cells [23], what led to the phenomenon is miR-133b suppresses its immediate taget-antiapoptotic protein Fas www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget apoptosis inhibitory molecule (FAIM) and antiapoptotic enzyme detoxifying protein glutathione-S-transferase pi (GSTP1) and promote TRAIL or αFas/CD95-mediated apoptosis, what is important is that the mechanism similar to HeLa cells can also be found in androgen-independent prostate cancer [23]. Interesting, miR-133b, recognized as androgen receptor (AR)targets, can promoting cell survival and proliferation in the androgen-dependent PCa cells by represses CDC2L5, PTPRK, RB1CC1, and CPNE3 [24], RB1CC1, which regulate cell growth, cell proliferation, apoptosis, can be repressed by miR-133b in less aggressive LNCaP prostate cancer cells [25]. Comparison of all these studies concludes that miR-133b have played a dual role in androgen-independent PCa and androgen-dependent PCa.
What is particularly intriguing is that miR-133b can conspicuously suppress nucleoporin member Nup214 expression in serveral human cancer, and which increased   [20] mitotic indices and delayed degradation of mitotic marker proteins cyclinB1 and cyclinA and dephosphorylation of H3. Moreover, this mitotic delay boosts chromosomal abnormalities and apoptosis [36]. Some signaling pathway can be affected by miR-133b, such as c-Met engagement activates multiple oncogenic pathways (RAS, PI3K, STAT3, beta-catenin), which itself is the Immediate target gene of miR-133b in colorectal cancer (CC) and osteosarcoma, its suppression can affected tumor cell proliferation and apoptosis in vitro and in vivo [28,37,38].

Regulatory role of miR-133b in altered energy metabolism of cancer cells
That metabolic alterations in cancer cells can drive tumor progression have already been widely accepted, a cancer-associated metabolic biochemistry pathway, Warburg effect, activates glycolysis and fuels tumor growth by providing energy and biosynthetic demands of cancer cells [42,43]. In lung cancer cells, miR-133b suppresses glycolysis and improves radiotherapy by targeting PKM2 (pyruvate kinase isoform M2), which is an essential enzyme involved in glycolysis and promoted the Warburg effect [44]. Much evidence indicates that PKM1, another isoform of Pyruvate kinase muscle (PKM) gene, is expressed in normal differentiated tissues, whereas PKM2 is expressed in proliferating and cancer cells, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) family can regulate the alternative splicing to switch their PKM isoform from PKM1 to PKM2 during tumor development [45]. In colorectal adenoma cancer miR-133b controlling PKM expression (switching of PKM1 to PKM2) through targeting polypyrimidine tract-binding protein 1 (PTB1), which is a splicer of the PKM gene and also known as hnRNPI [46] . Earlier finding also showed that miR-133b was significantly reduced in squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of tongue which depress PKM2 and interfere with the efficiency of proliferation and apoptosis [47]. (Figure 3A), Table 1.

The miR-133b and epidermal growth factor receptor
The relationship between miR-133b and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) separately discussed here mainly because the fact that miR-133b target EGFR or alter EGFR-specific genetic pathways have been found in several human cancer, such as ovarian cancer (OC) [48], prostate cancer (PC) [49], bladder cancer [50], (nonsmall-cell lung cancer) NSCLC [51], colorectal cancer [52]. And as we all know , EGFR, a transmembrane glycoprotein, constitutes one of the four members of ErbB family of tyrosine kinase receptors; activation of it can  initiate several signal transduction cascades, principally the MAPK, Akt and JNK pathways [53], furthermore, EGFR overactivity have been associated with a number of cancers and led to the development of anticancer therapeutics called "EGFR inhibitors" [54]. It's sure that dysregulated miR-133b plays a crucial role in the process-then, what is the concrete mechanism? In OC, miR-133b can reduce the phosphorylation of Erk1/2 and Akt by targeting EGFR [48]. The protein level of EGFR, phosphorylated ERK and AKT, MMP-2 was significantly lowered in PC cell lines after transfection of miR-133a/b, which indicate miR-133a/b suppress EGFR in PC cells whereby inactivating the downstream signals, MMP-2, as an effector of EGFR pathway and mediating cell migration and invasion [49], similar mechanisms may occur in NSCLC [51]and in bladder cancer [50]. Equally attractive is combined treatment of miR-133b and cetuxima can intensify suppression effect on the growth and invasion of colorectal cancer cells by modulating EGFR [52].
Although not concerning the gene EGFR, upregulation of miR-133b in cervical carcinoma boosts tumorigenesis and metastasis by targeting mammalian sterile 20like kinase 2 (MST2), cell division control protein 42 homolog (CDC42) and ras homolog gene family member A(RHOA), which subsequently bring about activation of the Akt and MARK signaling pathways [55].
Notwithstanding the fact that EGFR gene are commonly present in cancer, while there is a significant decrease in the expression of EGFR in glioblastoma (GBM) microvasculature, for the platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFRB), involved in GBM angiogenesis , occupy the primary position in microvascular proliferation, one of the reason is several elevated expression of miRs, including miR-133b, targeting and curbing EGFR [56]. (Figure 3B), Table 1.

Regulation mechanism of miR-133b inhibiting cell migration and innovation
The metastatic programme encompasses multiple sequential steps and involves a set of genes that regulate these complex processes. Note that many miRNAs are aberrantly expressed in various human cancers and regulate metastasis-associated genes and the vast majority of miRs performed functions by inhibit its downstream target genes [57,58]. With the latest deciphering of roles for miR-133b in the metastatic programme there are numerous such cancer gene have been identified, such as MMP14, MMP-9, the member of MMPs family, can be suppressed in GBM and renal cell carcinoma [59,60], respectively. ( Figure 3B, 3C), Table 1. Fascin actin-bundling protein 1(FSCN1), which plays a critical role in cell migration, motility, adhesion and cellular interactionsin, in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) [61] , gastrointestinal stromal tumor(GIST) [62] and gastric cancer [63], C-X-C motif chemokine receptor 4(CXCR4) and in colorectal cancer [64], IGF1R, MET, phospho-Akt and FAK in osteosarcoma [28], Gli1 in gastric cancer(GC) [65],Sp1 and its downstream proteins MMP-9 in GC [32], CTGF in HCC [35].
In addition, miR-133b can mediate cancer metastasis via regulating the tumor microenvironment, previous study [66] have found a marked up-regulation of miR-1 and miR-133b in interleukin-6 (IL6)-(human prostate fibroblasts) HPFs and (cancer associated fibroblasts) CAFs, miR-133b not only is able per se to promote fibroblast activation by inducing phenotypic changes but can be secreted by activated fibroblasts and may intake further by prostate carcinoma cells, by which mesenchymal phenotype would be established, and then CAFs induce EMT in tumor cells. These researches about miR-133b as metastasis promoter and metastasis suppressor therefore represent a new approach that may enhance our understanding of the molecular mechanisms modulating the metastatic cascade.

Regulation mechanism of miR-133b in chemotherapy and radiotherapy
Chemotherapy still remains the mainstay of treatments for locally advanced and metastasized cancer, but chemo-resistant properties created insurmountable problems for cancer therapy. Recent clinical and experimental studys showed that dysregulation of specific miRNAs cause drug resistance in various cancers and modification of these miRNAs via miRNA mimics or antagomiRs can rehabilitate the gene regulatory network and sensitize cancerous cells to chemotherapy [67,68].
B55δ, encoded by the PPP2R2D gene, can increase the suppressive effect of cisplatin (cDDP) in Hepatocellular carcinoma (HC), miR-133b was upregulated in HC cells and directly target PPP2R2D and suppress its expression and further disrupt its effect in improving chemotherapeutic sensitivity [69]. Another study in HC [70], However, found that miR-133b showed downregulation and might act as tumour suppressor, then, the participants accepted transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) using chemotherapy agents-doxorubicin and cisplatin, miR-133b and othter 11 miRNAs were significantly upregulated in the patients group of nonresponders compared to responders, so research suggests 12 miRNAs might be cooperatively associated with the development of resistance to doxorubicincisplatin combined treatment, the underlying cause was that 3 miRNAs among theser miRNAs are directly linked to drug resistance in cancer, especially miR-27a and miR-130a can stimulate MDR1-mediated drug resistance in HC cells, it had been identified that multidrug resistance protein 1(MDR1 or ABCB1) involved in doxorubicin and cisplatin resistance [71,72]. Similarity, yet paradoxically, miR-133b was significantly lower in primary resistant ovarian carcinomas and cell lines and reduced ovarian cancer drug resistance by silencing the expression of the drug-resistance-related proteins, glutathione S-transferase(GST-π) and multidrug resistance protein 1 (MDR1) [73]. Moreover, the response rate of esophageal www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) patients to paclitaxelbased chemotherapy was significantly higher in combined miR-133a/b downregulation group [74] ,miR-133b contributes to arsenic-induced apoptosis in glioma cells [34] and the joint utilization of miR-133b and cetuxima can enhance suppression effect on the growth and invasion of colorectal cancer cells by modulating EGFR [52]. These studies, though present tissue specificity, clearly confirmed that the chemotherapy efficiency of cancer is more closely related to abnormal expression of miR-133b. Besides the regulatory effects of miR-133b involved in chemosensitivity, some studies have also demonstrated its role playing in radiosensitivity. miR-133 was downregulated in radioresistant lung cancer cells, but restoring the miR-133b can resensitizes radioresistant lung cancer cells through the inhibition of PKM2-mediated glycolysis that interfere the sensitivity mechamism. Table 1.

The expression of miR-133b
As discussed in the previous section, miR-133b performs functions mainly depending on target genes suppressed by it, so in the first place, all target genes of miR-133b involved in human cancer were reviewed above. But a lot of research only focuses on the altered expression of miR-133b itself in human cancer; these studies demonstrated important clinical significance but there are still a lot of great challenges or paradoxes for us to solve, especially the double expression level of miR-133b in different cancers and or even in single human cancer. In the sections that follow, the clinical implication of altered expression of miR-133b in human cancer and the possible problems or paradoxes were analyzed.

Clinical implication of altered expression of miR-133b in human cancer
The identification of makers which can predict the oncogenesis and development of tumor is one of the highest priorities for translational cancer study. miRNAs could represent such much-anticipated biomakers and the potential for this had been identified for several different cancer forms [58,75,76]. To analyse and compare the pathological tissue by qPCR may be relatively commonly used in identifying promising tumor biomarkers, the overwhelming majority of the analyzed tumor entities showed significantly decreased intracellular miR-133b expression compared to matched non-malignant tissue, including lung cancer [77], urothelial carcinoma of bladder [78,79], gastric cancer [63,80], osteosarcoma [81]. These studies indicated that the downregulation of miR-133b was the independent factor and significantly associated with aggressive clinicopathologic features, tumor subtype, and poor survival rates. Similarity, qPCR evaluating microdissected preoperative biopsies from patients with rectal cancer showed a significant correlation between miR-133b and distant-metastasis-free survival [82]. In all resected colon cancer tissue without patient's recurrence, the miR-133b expression was significantly upregulated [83]. High expression of miR-185 and low expression of miR-133b were correlated with poor survival and metastasis in colorectal cancer [84], which suggest the potential prognostic values of these miRNAs for predicting clinical outcome after surgery, miR-1 and mir-133b have been significantly downregulated in recurrent PCa specimens and can serve as novel biomarkers for prediction of PCa progression [85]. Serum and secretions are another important clinical specimens, circulating serum miR-133b can be identified as the most important diagnostic and prognosis markers in breast cancer [86], gastric cancer [87] as well as in osteosarcoma [88], and miR-133b were significantly downregulated in prostatic secretions of patients with prostate cancer and could be used as diagnostics markers [89]. miR-133b may not only serve as both diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers but have great therapeutic potential in clinical practice. In a study of seeking the optimal miRNA delivery systems to treat lung cancer, miR-133b was selected because it directly targets the MCL-1 thus regulating cell survival and chemotherapeutic sensitivity, the result from this research demonstrated cationic lipoplexes may be a promising carrier system for miRNAbased therapeutics in lung cancer treatment [90]. Also in lung cancer, the experiment in vivo showed alteration of serum miR-206 and miR-133b may have to do with lung carcinogenesis induced by 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone [91]. MiR-133b consistently overexpressed in tolerogenic dendritic cells, which will provide possible therapeutic targets in the treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases [92].
Yet it is also worth noting that different research teams shows distinctly different miR-133b profiles even in the same tissues, the reason leading to these potentially conflicting and inconsistent results may be the method of miR detection, different intracellular signal transduction pathway, different miR assay platforms or the difficulties to distinguish the mature miR isomers (miR-133b belongs to myomiR families).
To better understand the role of altered expression of miR-133b in human cancer, we use OncoLnc (http://www. oncolnc.org/)exploring survival correlations of miR-133b in cancer (OncoLnc is a database can provide survival data for 8,647 patients from 21 cancer studies performed by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA)). The result showed 9 cancer data which uncovered similar results as above that different expression of miR-133b plays tumor suppressor and tumor promoter in various malignant tumors. (Figure 4). All indicated the fact that miR-133b regarded as much-anticipated biomarkers is gradually moving, though much is still to be done.

Regulatory mechanisms leading to abnormal expression of miR-133b
What matters, and become more particularly significant in all these studies, is the abnormally expressed miR-133b in human cancer and to illuminates the underlying mechanism resulting in alteration. Regulation of microRNA expression can be exerted through several mechanisms such as chromosomal abnormalities, biogenesis defects, epigenetic changes, transcription, miRs-oncogenes feedback mechanism [4,114].

Epigenetic modifications
Epigenetics is a pivotal mechanism involved in regulating the progression of malignant tumor. Existing studies have shown that miR-133b dysregulation in tumor is regulated by epigenetic modifications. Histone methylation inhibitor DZNep or histone deacetylation (HDAC) inhibitor SAHA consistently increased the expression of miR-133b/a-3p in GC cell lines, and last but not least, decreased levels of H3 acetylation and increased levels of H3K27me3 were observed in the promoter region of miR-133b, all this indicating that both histone methylation and histone acetylation might be responsible for miR-133b/a-3p downregulation, but simultaneously discover showed DNA methylation inhibitor 5-Azacytidine't didn't increased the expression of miR-133b/a-3p in GC cell lines [30]. Compared with it, a research conducted in colorectal cancer found the CpG islands of miR-133b promoter presents hypermethylation in CRC tissues and cells, functional analysis demonstrated that demethylation treatment with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (5-Aza-CdR) can increased the expression of miR-133b and then reversed its anticancer effects. At the same time, the study also shows that histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor (PBA) can increase the expression of silenced Figure 4: The dual expression of miR-133b in human cancer. The database OncoLnc was used to explore survival correlations of miR-133b in cancer, the database provided 9 cancer data between miR-133b and human cancer, the Cox coefficient and p-value are from the gene term in precomputed multivariate Cox regressions and the FDR correction is performed per cancer analysis per data type (left); the representative example of OncoLnc Kaplan-Meier results(right), in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma(HNSC), the low expression of miR-133b have a higher survival rate(upper right); in Cervical cancer (CESC), the high expression of miR-133b have a higher survival rate(lower right).More details and abbreviation can be found in TCGA(https://cancergenome.nih.gov/) and OncoLnc(http://www.oncolnc.org/). miR-133b, which may imply histone modification also mediate miR-133b expression [115].
In addition, miRs themselves are capable of targeting genes which regulate epigenetic pathways. Dysregulation of DNMTs, a key DNA methylation enzyme including DNMTs 1, 3A, and 3B, has been linked to various disease processes, including cancer and congenital disorders. These enzymes are predicted to be potential targets of miRNAs, just as the miR-29 can regulate methylationsilenced genes by target DNMTs 3A and 3B. But in a research of acute myeloid leukemia, Niederwieser C et al. [116] found that high DNMT3B expression seemingly an independent prognostic factor from mechanisms of DNA hypermethylation and/or microRNA-dependent gene repression, at the same time they attempted to explain why the miR-133b presented unique upregulation in high DNMT3B expressers. In summary, the epigenetics-miRNA regulatory circuit plays an important role in abnormal expression of miR-133b. ( Figure 3A)

Transcription factor and non coding RNAs involved regulation
The dysregulated miRs expression in cancer can also result from increased or decreased transcription activity at the gene promoter. Some reports in prostate cancer have identified miRs in androgen receptor (AR) signaling, such as miR-21, owing to AR binding on the defined promoter, was directly up-regulated by AR [117]. To better elucidate miRs roles in AR signaling, Wenjuan Mo etc. [24] introduced Response Score to identify AR target miRNAs and 15 miRNAs were theoretically identified as candidate in the end, based on GenMAPP and ChIP assay results they found a significant AR-binding to the chromatin of predicted AREs (in the upstream and downstream 15 kb of pre-miRNA's 5ʹ-start site) in miR-19a, miR-27a and miR-133b in treated LNCaP cells, and AR driven transcription of these miRs. An extensive new research study [118] has found that flavin-dependent monoamine oxidase KDM1A can triggers androgen-induced miR-133b transcription via H3K4me2 demethylation and DNA oxidation. Similarly, miR-133b dysregulation in colon cancer cells was allegedly due to the change of transcription activity caused by TAp63, miR-133b is a transcriptional target of TAp63 so that p63 can directly drives the miR-133b expression via the binding site, what is important is that TAp63 can inhibit cells migration and metastasis by indirectly regulating the expression of target gene of miR-133b (such as RhoA) and epithelial-mesenchymal markers in colon cancer in virtue of TAp63/miR-133b axis [119].
In addition to changes of transcription activity of a transcription factor, microRNA expression can be also modulated as a consequence of potential synergy between non coding RNAs, such as miRs themself and long non-coding RNA, a research that miRNA profiling and quantitative integrated omics analysis of a pancreatic cancer cell line found overexpression of miR-145 can increase other miRs including miR-124, miR-133b and miR-125a-3p, all of which are implicated in inhibition of tumors and are generally co-regulated with miR-145 in other cancers [120]. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have emerged in recent years engaging in numerous biological processes across species [121]; despite no researches about miR-133b-lncRNA regulatory network have been reported in human cancer, but the research evidence from out group (unpublished) and the fact that miR-133b is one of the earliest validated ceRNA regulators [122] make us believe that the mutual regulation and synergistic effects of miR-133b-lncRNA can be found in tumor. (Figure 3A).

Conclusion and perspective
As noted above, discrepancies present in miR-133b profiles detecting, even in same tissues. One the underlying causes may be that most of these researches come from individual studies and small sample size, despite the ethnic variation and tissue specificity, more researches need to be done and techniques just as employing pri-or pre-miR RT-PCR assays and deep sequencing should be improved and adopted to accurately re-evaluate the genome-wide miRs expression profiles of different cancers. Simultaneously, miRs-mRNAs regulatory networks are extraordinarily complex; some research indicates that only a small portion of protein expression changes could be explained by predicted direct binding of miRNAs to corresponding mRNAs [123], so more detailed endogenous network regulation should be clarified. All these are important to understand the regulation process of particular pathological states. In the era of personalized medicine, miRNAs can become a long-awaited and was full of prospects marker in diagnostic and therapy development for various kinds of human cancers. Nonetheless, there are still lots of new challenging jobs to address in order to take advantage of miRNAs as efficient and safe therapeutics.
Here, we describe miR-133b, one of the myomiRs, was involved in human cancer, stressing its individualistic roles as tumor activators and suppressors, and discusses the concrete mechanism playing in different hallmarks of cancer and possible use in the clinic as predictive markers and as therapeutic strategies for tumor patients. With the indepth research, individual myomiRs have unique functional roles in the physiological-biochemical mechanism of numerous non-muscle cells and tissues, beyond their initial definition as muscle-specific factors, and hence elucidation of these myomiRs and their complicated regulation network together or independently becomes particularly important.