Faculty Opinions recommendation of Drosophila Upf1 and Upf2 loss of function inhibits cell growth and causes animal death in a Upf3-independent manner.

Author(s):  
Michael Kiebler
RNA ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 624-638 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Avery ◽  
M. Vicente-Crespo ◽  
D. Francis ◽  
O. Nashchekina ◽  
C. R. Alonso ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thao Pham ◽  
Kristin Robinson ◽  
Terra Vleeshouwer-Neumann ◽  
James E. Annis ◽  
Eleanor Y. Chen

AbstractRhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft-tissue pediatric sarcoma. Treatment options remain limited, presenting an urgent need for novel therapeutic targets. Using a high-throughput siRNA screen against the human kinome, we identified GRK5, a G-protein receptor kinase, as a novel regulator of RMS tumor cell growth and self-renewal. Through functional assays in vitro and in vivo, we show that GRK5 regulates cell cycling in a kinase-independent manner to promote RMS tumor cell growth. GRK5 interacts with NFAT to facilitate autoregulation of NFAT1 expression in a kinase independent manner, and loss of NFAT1 phenocopies GRK5 loss-of-function effects on cell cycle arrest. Self-renewal of RMS, required for recapitulation of tumor heterogeneity, is significantly reduced with loss of GRK5 due to increased cell death. Treatment of human RMS xenografts in mice with CCG-215022, a GRK5-selective inhibitor, reduces tumor growth of RMS. GRK5 represents a novel therapeutic target for the treatment of RMS.Statement of SignificanceGRK5 promotes growth and self-renewal of RMS, thereby representing a novel therapeutic target for improving survival outcomes of RMS patients. GRK5 regulates RMS tumor cell growth in a kinase-independent manner through direct interaction with NFAT1. This finding promises novel drug design, targeting non-kinase domains of GRK5.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Wang ◽  
Zhiwei He ◽  
Jian Xu ◽  
Peng Chen ◽  
Jianxin Jiang

AbstractAn accumulation of evidence indicates that long noncoding RNAs are involved in the tumorigenesis and progression of pancreatic cancer (PC). In this study, we investigated the functions and molecular mechanism of action of LINC00941 in PC. Quantitative PCR was used to examine the expression of LINC00941 and miR-335-5p in PC tissues and cell lines, and to investigate the correlation between LINC00941 expression and clinicopathological features. Plasmid vectors or lentiviruses were used to manipulate the expression of LINC00941, miR-335-5p, and ROCK1 in PC cell lines. Gain or loss-of-function assays and mechanistic assays were employed to verify the roles of LINC00941, miR-335-5p, and ROCK1 in PC cell growth and metastasis, both in vivo and in vitro. LINC00941 and ROCK1 were found to be highly expressed in PC, while miR-335-5p exhibited low expression. High LINC00941 expression was strongly associated with larger tumor size, lymph node metastasis, and poor prognosis. Functional experiments revealed that LINC00941 silencing significantly suppressed PC cell growth, metastasis and epithelial–mesenchymal transition. LINC00941 functioned as a molecular sponge for miR-335-5p, and a competitive endogenous RNA (ceRNA) for ROCK1, promoting ROCK1 upregulation, and LIMK1/Cofilin-1 pathway activation. Our observations lead us to conclude that LINC00941 functions as an oncogene in PC progression, behaving as a ceRNA for miR-335-5p binding. LINC00941 may therefore have potential utility as a diagnostic and treatment target in this disease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keisuke Hitachi ◽  
Yuri Kiyofuji ◽  
Masashi Nakatani ◽  
Kunihiro Tsuchida

RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) regulate cell physiology via the formation of ribonucleic-protein complexes with coding and non-coding RNAs. RBPs have multiple functions in the same cells; however, the precise mechanism through which their pleiotropic functions are determined remains unknown. In this study, we revealed the multiple inhibitory functions of hnRNPK for myogenic differentiation. We first identified hnRNPK as a lncRNA Myoparr binding protein. Gain- and loss-of-function experiments showed that hnRNPK repressed the expression of myogenin at the transcriptional level via binding to Myoparr. Moreover, hnRNPK repressed the expression of a set of genes coding for aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases in a Myoparr-independent manner. Mechanistically, hnRNPK regulated the eIF2α/Atf4 pathway, one branch of the intrinsic pathways of the endoplasmic reticulum sensors, in differentiating myoblasts. Thus, our findings demonstrate that hnRNPK plays multiple lncRNA-dependent and -independent roles in the inhibition of myogenic differentiation, indicating that the analysis of lncRNA-binding proteins will be useful for elucidating both the physiological functions of lncRNAs and the multiple functions of RBPs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhihui Liu ◽  
Sukun Luo ◽  
Meiqin Wu ◽  
Chong Huang ◽  
Huifen Shi ◽  
...  

Abstract Cervical cancer (CC) is a prevalent gynecological cancer, and the patients with CC usually suffer from dismal prognosis. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are demonstrated to serve as promising biological targets in human cancers. Gastric carcinoma proliferation enhancing transcript 1 (GHET1) has been revealed to function as an oncogene in several cancers, but it has never been investigated in CC. We proposed to examine the biological role of GHET1 in CC and the underlying mechanism and validated the up-regulated expression of GHET1 in CC cell lines. Loss-of-function assays demonstrated that down-regulation of GHET1 inhibited cell growth, migration and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in CC. Furthermore, we validated that GHET1 down-regulation could inactivate AKT/mTOR and Wnt/β-catenin pathways, and that respective activation of these two pathways abrogated the inhibitive effect of GHET1 knockdown on CC cell growth, migration and EMT. Moreover, we unfolded a preliminary investigation on the modulation of GHET1 on AKT/mTOR and Wnt/β-catenin pathways. We found that GHET1 stabilized E2F6 mRNA through interacting with IGF2BP2, so as to regulate the activity of AKT/mTOR and Wnt/β-catenin pathways. Rescue assays also proved that GHET1 regulated these two pathways and CC cell growth, migration and EMT through E2F6. In conclusion, we revealed that down-regulation of GHET1 suppresses cervical cancer progression through regulating AKT/mTOR and Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathways, indicating GHET1 as a promising molecular biomarker for CC treatment improvement.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 28-28
Author(s):  
Simona Pagliuca ◽  
Yihong Guan ◽  
Anand D. Tiwari ◽  
Dale Grabowski ◽  
Carmelo Gurnari ◽  
...  

Neomorphic mutations in IDH1/2 producing R-2-Hydroxyglutrate (R-2HG), are common in myeloid malignancies and in various solid cancers. A diffuse hypermethylated status is the biological consequence of the R-2HG-mediated inhibition of several α-ketoglutarate (αKG)-dependent enzymes including DNA dioxygenases TET1, TET2 and TET3.1,2 Specifically, the inhibition of TET2, either induced by the interaction with R-2HG or by direct genomic silencing (as in case of TET2 loss of function mutations) is responsible for the block of the DNA cytosine demethylation pathway, inducing changes in expression patterns, (e.g. decreasing expression of tumor suppressor genes) and impairing execution of differentiation programs. Analysis of genomic data from a Cleveland Clinic (CCF) cohort of AML/MDS patients combined in a meta-analytic fashion with BeatAML3 and Tumor Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohorts (1119 profiled patients) showed that IDH1/2 mutations are mutually exclusive (only 3% [N=4/106] of AML IDH1/2 mutated cases had TET2 mutations, expected to be at a frequency of 18% [N=110/585] in IDH1/2 wild type cases, p=.000125). In this scenario we suggest that the loss of TET2 activity due to mutations prevents the expansion of IDH1/2 mutant myeloid neoplasms (MNs) because of phenotypic redundancies inducing synthetic lethality. With this premise we stipulated that a critical level of DNA dioxygenase activity exists and thus cells with low TET2 activity will not tolerate further inhibition by R-2HG. Here we propose to apply pharmacologic inhibition of TET2 to produce an additive effect on DNA dioxygenases to investigate whether this will result in a synthetic lethality of IDH1/2 mutant cells. Specifically we hypothesize that TET-dioxygenase inhibition may be implemented as a possible therapeutic strategy in neomorphic IDH1/2 mutant MNs. To explore this hypothesis we conducted a series of in vitro experiments in different isogenic cell lines expressing either mutant or wild type IDH1 or IDH2, that were simultaneously mutant, wild type (WT) or knock down (KD) for TET2 (TF1-IDH2R140Q, K562-IDH1R132C both WT for TET2 gene, and K18-IDH1R132CTET2KD and SIGM5-IDH1R132C TET2MT, both with a doxycycline inducible promoter for mutant IDH1). First we found that the doxycycline induction of ectopic IDH1R132C expression led to R-2HG increase (~10,000-fold over the baseline) and induced cell death in TET2-deficient cells (experiments conducted in SIGM5-IDH1R132C cells showing 70% of decrease in cell growth after five days of IDH induction with doxycycline), confirming the cytotoxic effect of cellular R-2HG. We then tested in IDH1/2MT cells sensitivity towards TETi76, a specific TET inhibitor designed on R-2HG scaffold (with more than 200 fold potency compared to R-2HG in cell-free assays of 5-hydroxy-methyl cytosine [5hMC] production).4 This compound showed particular selectivity towards inhibition of DNA dioxygenases when a set of 23 other dioxygenase inhibitors were screened. Most importantly, consistent with our hypothesis, TETi76 preferentially inhibited the proliferation of IDH1/2MT cells either following doxycycline-induction both in TET2WTand TET2 deficient models (K562 TET2WT, K18 TET2kD, SIGM-5 TET2MT cell lines), or in models not carrying the inducible promoter (TF1 TETWT) (Growth inhibition: 20-25% in IDHWT vs 70-80% in IDHMT cell lines after 72h of co-culture with TETi76 treatment for concentrations ranging between 1 and 5 µM. P-value range: 0.04-0.001 in pairwise comparisons with untreated controls). Overall, our findings are consistent with the idea that neomorphic IDH1/2MT phenocopies loss of function TET2MT, through R-2HG, down-modulating pathways fundamental for cell homeostasis, division and differentiation. If a residual TET-activity is needed for the function of IDH1/2MT cells, the complete block of the residual activity appears to inevitably disrupt this phenotype impairing cell growth and proliferation. This is also in agreement with the paucity of TET3 and TET1 mutation in the context of TET2MT carriers. In summary, results shown here represent an important proof of concept that the increased inhibition of DNA dioxygenase activity, instead of being more leukemogenic, can be synthetically lethal. Our observations may have implications with regard to the therapy of IDH1/2 mutated neoplasms including AML and MDS Disclosures Saunthararajah: EpiDestiny: Consultancy, Current equity holder in private company, Patents & Royalties: University of Illinois at Chicago. Maciejewski:Alexion, BMS: Speakers Bureau; Novartis, Roche: Consultancy, Honoraria.


2018 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 144-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ye Yuan ◽  
Fubiao Niu ◽  
Ilja M. Nolte ◽  
Jasper Koerts ◽  
Debora de Jong ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) is among the most frequent lymphoma subtypes. The tumor cells originate from crippled germinal center (GC)-B cells that escaped from apoptosis. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play important roles in B-cell maturation and aberrant expression of miRNAs contributes to the pathogenesis of cHL. Our aim was to identify oncogenic miRNAs relevant for growth of cHL using a high-throughput screening approach. Methods: A lentiviral pool of 63 miRNA inhibition constructs was used to identify miRNAs essential to cell growth in three cHL cell lines in duplicate. As a negative control we also infected cHL cell lines with a lentiviral barcoded empty vector pool consisting of 222 constructs. The abundance of individual constructs was followed over time by a next generation sequencing approach. The effect on growth was confirmed using individual GFP competition assays and on apoptosis using Annexin-V staining. Our previously published Argonaute 2 (Ago2) immunoprecipitation (IP) data were used to identify target genes relevant for cell growth / apoptosis. Luciferase assays and western blotting were performed to confirm targeting by miRNAs. Results: Four miRNA inhibition constructs, i.e. miR-449a-5p, miR-625-5p, let-7f-2-3p and miR-21-5p, showed a significant decrease in abundance in at least 4 of 6 infections. In contrast, none of the empty vector constructs showed a significant decrease in abundance in 3 or more of the 6 infections. The most abundantly expressed miRNA, i.e. miR-21-5p, showed significantly higher expression levels in cHL compared to GC-B cells. GFP competition assays confirmed the negative effect of miR-21-5p inhibition on HL cell growth. Annexin-V staining of cells infected with miR-21-5p inhibitor indicated a significant increase in apoptosis at day 7 and 9 after viral infection, consistent with the decrease in growth. Four miR-21-5p cell growth- and apoptosis-associated targets were AGO2-IP enriched in cHL cell lines and showed a significant decrease in expression in cHL cell lines in comparison to normal GC-B cells. For the two most abundantly expressed, i.e. BTG2 and PELI1, we confirmed targeting by miR-21-5p using luciferase assays and for PELI1 we also confirmed this at the protein level by western blotting. Conclusion: Using a miRNA loss-of-function high-throughput screen we identified four miRNAs with oncogenic effects in cHL and validated the results for the in cHL abundantly expressed miR-21-5p. MiR-21-5p is upregulated in cHL compared to GC-B cells and protects cHL cells from apoptosis possibly via targeting BTG2 and PELI1.


2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd McCall ◽  
Steven S. Chin ◽  
Karen L. Salzman ◽  
Daniel W. Fults

Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is a congenital neurocutaneous syndrome (or phacomatosis) characterized by widespread development of hamartomas in multiple organs. For affected individuals, neurological and psychiatric complications are the most disabling and lethal features. Although the clinical phenotype of TS is complex, only three lesions characterize the neuropathological features of the disease: cortical tubers, subependymal nodules, and subependymal giant cell astrocytomas. The latter is a benign brain tumor of mixed neuronal and glial origin. Tuberous sclerosis is caused by loss-of-function mutations in one of two genes, TSC1 or TSC2. The normal cellular proteins encoded by these genes, hamartin and tuberin, respectively, form a heterodimer that suppresses cell growth in the central nervous system by dampening the phosphatidylinositol 3–kinase signal transduction pathway. The authors review the clinical and neuropathological features of TS as well as recent research into the molecular biology of this disease. Through this work, investigators are beginning to resolve the paradoxical findings that malignant cancers seldom arise in patients with TS, even though the signaling molecules involved are key mediators of cancer cell growth.


2012 ◽  
Vol 302 (6) ◽  
pp. L541-L554 ◽  
Author(s):  
James P. Maloney ◽  
Robert S. Stearman ◽  
Todd M. Bull ◽  
David W. Calabrese ◽  
Megan L. Tripp-Addison ◽  
...  

Most patients with familial pulmonary arterial hypertension (FPAH) carry mutations in the bone morphogenic protein receptor 2 gene ( BMPR2). Yet carriers have only a 20% risk of disease, suggesting that other factors influence penetrance. Thrombospondin-1 (TSP1) regulates activation of TGF-β and inhibits endothelial and smooth muscle cell proliferation, pathways coincidentally altered in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). To determine whether a subset of FPAH patients also have mutations in the TSP1 gene ( THBS1) we resequenced the type I repeats of THBS1 encoding the TGF-β regulation and cell growth inhibition domains in 60 FPAH probands, 70 nonfamilial PAH subjects, and in large control groups. We identified THBS1 mutations in three families: a novel missense mutation in two (Asp362Asn), and an intronic mutation in a third (IVS8+255 G/A). Neither mutation was detected in population controls. Mutant 362Asn TSP1 had less than half of the ability of wild-type TSP1 to activate TGF-β. Mutant 362Asn TSP1 also lost the ability to inhibit growth of pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells and was over threefold less effective at inhibiting endothelial cell growth. The IVS8+255 G/A mutation decreased and/or eliminated local binding of the transcription factors SP1 and MAZ but did not affect RNA splicing. These novel mutations implicate THBS1 as a modifier gene in FPAH. These THBS1 mutations have implications in the genetic evaluation of FPAH patients. However, since FPAH is rare, these data are most relevant as evidence for the importance of TSP1 in pulmonary vascular homeostasis. Further examination of THBS1 in the pathogenesis of PAH is warranted.


2003 ◽  
Vol 23 (21) ◽  
pp. 7742-7755 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ge Zhou ◽  
Yoshihiro Hashimoto ◽  
Inseok Kwak ◽  
Sophia Y. Tsai ◽  
Ming-Jer Tsai

ABSTRACT Steroid receptor coactivator 3 (SRC-3/p/CIP/AIB1/ACTR/RAC3/TRAM-1) is a member of the p160 family of nuclear receptor coactivators, which includes SRC-1 (NCoA-1) and SRC-2 (TIF2/GRIP1/NCoA2). Previous studies indicate that SRC-3 is required for normal animal growth and is often amplified or overexpressed in many cancers, including breast and prostate cancers. However, the mechanisms of SRC-3-mediated growth regulation remain unclear. In this study, we show that overexpression of SRC-3 stimulates cell growth to increase cell size in prostate cancer cell lines. Furthermore, our results indicate that overexpression of SRC-3 can modulate the AKT signaling pathway in a steroid-independent manner, which results in the activation of AKT/mTOR signaling concomitant with an increase in cell size. In contrast, down-regulation of SRC-3 expression in cells by small interfering RNA decreases cell growth, leading to a smaller cell size. Similarly, in SRC-3 null mutant mice, AKT signaling is down-regulated in normally SRC-3-expressing tissues. Taken together, these results suggest that SRC-3 is an important modulator for mammalian cell growth.


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