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N-BLR, a primate-specific non-coding transcript leads to colorectal cancer invasion and migration

Authors :
Shah, Maitri Y.
Lopez-Berestein, Gabriel
Liu, Chang Gong
Nam, Su Youn
Jing, Yi
Esteller, Manel
Ling, Hui
Yeh, Jen Jen
Gafà, Roberta
Ferdin, Jana
Rodriguez-Aguayo, Cristian
Pichler, Martin
Negrini, Massimo
Spizzo, Riccardo
Ivan, Cristina
Zhang, Xinna
Nicoloso, Milena S.
Calin, George A.
Telonis, Aristeidis G.
Menter, David
Melo, Sonia A.
Lanza, Giovanni
Tsirigos, Aristotelis
Kopetz, Scott
Rigoutsos, Isidore
Bar-Eli, Menashe
Clark, Peter M.
Okugawa, Yoshinaga
Tiron, Aida
Catela Ivkovic, Tina
Jung, Eun Jung
Flores, Elsa R.
Huang, Li
Mani, Sendurai A.
Pasculli, Barbara
Paranjape, Anurag N.
Anfossi, Simone
Lee, Sang Kil
Xiao, Lianchun
Shimizu, Masayoshi
Berindan-Neagoe, Ioana
Redis, Roxana S.
Rossi, Simona
Goel, Ajay
Fabris, Linda
Shariati, Maryam
Jiang, Zhi-Qin
Teruel-Montoya, Raul
Publisher :
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries

Abstract

Background Non-coding RNAs have been drawing increasing attention in recent years as functional data suggest that they play important roles in key cellular processes. N-BLR is a primate-specific long non-coding RNA that modulates the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, facilitates cell migration, and increases colorectal cancer invasion. Results We performed multivariate analyses of data from two independent cohorts of colorectal cancer patients and show that the abundance of N-BLR is associated with tumor stage, invasion potential, and overall patient survival. Through in vitro and in vivo experiments we found that N-BLR facilitates migration primarily via crosstalk with E-cadherin and ZEB1. We showed that this crosstalk is mediated by a pyknon, a short ~20 nucleotide-long DNA motif contained in the N-BLR transcript and is targeted by members of the miR-200 family. In light of these findings, we used a microarray to investigate the expression patterns of other pyknon-containing genomic loci. We found multiple such loci that are differentially transcribed between healthy and diseased tissues in colorectal cancer and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Moreover, we identified several new loci whose expression correlates with the colorectal cancer patients’ overall survival. Conclusions The primate-specific N-BLR is a novel molecular contributor to the complex mechanisms that underlie metastasis in colorectal cancer and a potential novel biomarker for this disease. The presence of a functional pyknon within N-BLR and the related finding that many more pyknon-containing genomic loci in the human genome exhibit tissue-specific and disease-specific expression suggests the possibility of an alternative class of biomarkers and therapeutic targets that are primate-specific.

Subjects

Subjects :
3. Good health

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........119460ede403e2f2f81d24f69966695d