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Downregulation of miR-200c stabilizes XIAP mRNA and contributes to invasion and lung metastasis of bladder cancer

Jin, Honglei; Xue, Lei; Mo, Lan; Zhang, Dongyun; Guo, Xirui; Xu, Jiheng; Li, Jingxia; Peng, Minggang; Zhao, Xuewei; Zhong, Minghao; Xu, Dazhong; Wu, Xue-Ru; Huang, Haishan; Huang, Chuanshu
Our previous studies have demonstrated that XIAP promotes bladder cancer metastasis through upregulating RhoGDIβ/MMP-2 pathway. However, the molecular mechanisms leading to the XIAP upregulation was unclear. In current studies, we found that XIAP was overexpressed in human high grade BCs, high metastatic human BCs, and in mouse invasive BCs. Mechanistic studies indicated that XIAP overexpression in the highly metastatic T24T cells was due to increased mRNA stability of XIAP that was mediated by downregulated miR-200c. Moreover, the downregulated miR-200c was due to CREB inactivation, while miR-200c downregulation reduced its binding to the 3'-UTR region of XIAP mRNA. Collectively, our results demonstrate the molecular basis leading to XIAP overexpression and its crucial role in BC invasion.
PMID: 31240993
ISSN: 1933-6926
CID: 3963692

Epigenetic Inactivation of SOX30 Is Associated with Male Infertility and Offers a Therapy Target for Non-obstructive Azoospermia

Han, Fei; Jiang, Xiao; Li, Zhi-Ming; Zhuang, Xuan; Zhang, Xi; Ouyang, Wei-Ming; Liu, Wen-Bin; Mao, Cheng-Yi; Chen, Qing; Huang, Chuan-Shu; Gao, Fei; Cui, Zhi-Hong; Ao, Lin; Li, Yan-Feng; Cao, Jia; Liu, Jin-Yi
Non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA) is the most severe form of male infertility. However, the etiology of NOA is largely unknown, resulting in a lack of clinical treatments. Here, we performed a comparative genome-wide profiling of DNA methylation and identified SOX30 as the most notably hyper-methylated gene at promoter in testicular tissues from NOA patients. This hyper-methylation at promoter of SOX30 directly causes its silencing of expression in NOA. The reduced levels of SOX30 expression are correlated with severity of NOA disease. Deletion of Sox30 in mice uniquely impairs testis development and spermatogenesis with complete absence of spermatozoa in testes leading to male infertility, but does not influence ovary development and female fertility. The pathology and testicular size of Sox30 null mice highly simulate those of NOA patients. Re-expression of Sox30 in Sox30 null mice at adult age reverses the pathological damage of testis and restores the spermatogenesis. The re-presented spermatozoa after re-expression of Sox30 in Sox30 null mice have the ability to start a pregnancy. Moreover, the male offspring of Sox30 re-expression Sox30 null mice still can father children, and these male offspring and their children can live normally more than 1 year without significant difference of physical appearance compared with wild-type mice. In summary, methylated inactivation of SOX30 uniquely impairs spermatogenesis, probably causing NOA disease, and re-expression of SOX30 can successfully restore the spermatogenesis and actual fertility. This study advances our understanding of the pathogenesis of NOA, offering a promising therapy target for NOA disease.
PMID: 31835093
ISSN: 2162-2531
CID: 4238952

Neutrophilic Granule Protein Is a Novel Murine LPS Antagonist

Hong, Jaewoo; Qu, Peng; Wuest, Todd R; Huang, Haishan; Huang, Chuanshu; Lin, P Charles
Neutrophilic granule protein (NGP) was previously reported as a granular protein of neutrophils in mouse, but the function has not been known clearly. We found the presence of the possible signal peptide in NGP and validated this protein is circulating in the bloodstream. In our findings, NGP is being modified post-translationally in Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum, which is a universal character of secretory molecules with a signal peptide. The secreted NGP protein could be detected both in vitro and in vivo. NGP has sequence similarity with an antimicrobial protein cathelicidin, and we observed the aspect of inflammation of NGP. Interestingly, NGP interacts with the complex of LPS and LPS binding protein (LBP). This interaction blocks the binding of the complex of LPS and LBP to TLR4 and the downstream inflammatory signals. Furthermore, the inhibitory function of NGP against the inflammatory effect of LPS could be observed in both in vitro and in vivo. With these findings, we report NGP is a novel secretory protein to mask LPS and inhibit its function.
PMCID:6829075
PMID: 31720045
ISSN: 1598-2629
CID: 4186872

p85α Inactivates MMP-2 and Suppresses Bladder Cancer Invasion by Inhibiting MMP-14 Transcription and TIMP-2 Degradation

Wang, Jingjing; Zhang, Ning; Peng, Minggang; Hua, Xiaohui; Huang, Chao; Tian, Zhongxian; Xie, Qipeng; Zhu, Junlan; Li, Jingxia; Huang, Haishan; Huang, Chuanshu
Recent studies show p85α up-regulates epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, thereby promoting malignant cell transformation and migration in normal mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). However, the potential role of p85α in human bladder cancer (BC) remains unknown. Here, we show that p85α is down-regulated in BC tumor tissues. Ectopic expression of p85α inhibited cell invasion, but not migration, whereas p85α knockdown promoted invasion in BC cells, revealing that p85α inhibits BC invasion. Overexpression of kinase-deficient p110 in T24 T(p85α) cells inhibited BC cell migration, but not invasion, suggesting that the inhibition of p85α on invasion is independent of PI3K activity. The effect of p85α on inhibiting BC invasion was mediated by the inactivation of MMP-2 concomitant with the up-regulation of TIMP-2 and down-regulation of MMP-14. Mechanistic studies revealed c-Jun inactivation was associated with p85α knockdown-induced MMP-14 expression, and down-regulated miR-190, leading to ATG7 mRNA degradation. This suppressed the autophagy-dependent removal of TIMP-2 in human BC cells. The present results identify a novel function of p85α and clarify the mechanisms underlying its inhibition of BC invasion, providing insight into the role of p85α in normal and cancer cells.
PMID: 31401412
ISSN: 1476-5586
CID: 4043122

Inhibition of UBE2N-dependent CDK6 protein degradation by miR-934 promotes human bladder cancer cell growth

Yan, Huiying; Ren, Shuwei; Lin, Qi; Yu, Yuan; Chen, Caiyi; Hua, Xiaohui; Jin, Honglei; Lu, Yongyong; Zhang, Huxiang; Xie, Qipeng; Huang, Chuanshu; Huang, Haishan
Because bladder cancer (BC) is one of the most common malignant cancers of the urinary system, identification of BC cell growth-associated effectors is of great significance. Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)6 is a member of the CDK family of cell cycle-related proteins and plays an important role in cancer cell growth. This is borne out by the fact that a CDK6 inhibitor had been approved to treat several types of cancers. Nevertheless, underlying molecular mechanisms concerning how to regulate CDK6 expression in BC remains unclear. In the present study, it was observed that miR-934 was much higher in human BCs and human BC cell lines as well. The results also revealed that miR-934 inhibition dramatically decreased human BC cell monolayer growth in vitro and xenograft tumor growth in vivo; the outcomes were accompanied by CDK6 protein down-regulation and G0-G1 cell cycle arrest. Moreover, overexpression of CDK6 reversed the inhibition of BC cell growth induced by miR-934. Further studies showed that miR-934 binds to a 3'-UTR of ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme 2N (ube2n) mRNA, down-regulated UBE2N protein expression; this, in turn, attenuated CDK6 protein degradation and led to CDK6 protein accumulation as well as the promotion of BC tumor growth. Collectively, this study not only establishes a novel regulatory axis of miR-934/UBE2N of CDK6 but also provides data suggesting that miR-934 and UBE2N may be potentially promising targets for therapeutic strategies against BC.-Yan, H., Ren, S., Lin, Q., Yu, Y., Chen, C., Hua, X., Jin, H., Lu, Y., Zhang, H., Xie, Q., Huang, C., Huang, H. Inhibition of UBE2N-dependent CDK6 protein degradation by miR-934 promotes human bladder cancer cell growth.
PMID: 31373842
ISSN: 1530-6860
CID: 4015482

Transcriptionally elevation of miR-494 by new ChlA-F compound via a HuR/JunB axis inhibits human bladder cancer cell invasion

Tian, Zhongxian; Luo, Yisi; Zhu, Junlan; Hua, Xiaohui; Xu, Jiheng; Huang, Chao; Jin, Honglei; Huang, Haishan; Huang, Chuanshu
Muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) is characterized by a poor overall survival rate in patients. Therefore, innovation and evaluation of idea anti-cancer compounds is of importance for reducing the mortality of MIBCs. The chemotherapeutic activity of ChlA-F, a novel C8 fluoride derivative of cheliensisin A with potent anti-neoplastic properties, was barely investigated. We reported here that ChlA-F treatment significantly induced miR-494 expression and suppressed cell invasion in human MIBC cells. Our results indicated that miR-494 was downregulated in M1 metastatic BC patients in comparison to non-metastatic (M0) BC patients, and such downregulation was also well correlated with over survival rate for MIBC patients. Mechanistically, ChlA-F-induced upregulation of miR-494 was due to a HuR-mediated increase in JunB mRNA stabilization and protein expression, which led to an increase in miR-494 transcription via directly binding to the miR-494 promoter region, while the upregulated miR-494 was able to bind the 3'-UTR region of c-Myc mRNA, resulting in decreased c-Myc mRNA stability and protein expression and further reducing the transcription of c-Myc-regulated MMP-2 and ultimately inhibiting BC invasion. Our results provide the first evidence showing that miR-494 downregulation was closely associated with BC metastatic status and overall BC survival, and ChlA-F was able to reverse the level of miR-494 with a profound inhibition of human BC invasion in human invasive BC cells. Our studies also reveal that ChlA-F is a promising therapeutic compound for BCs and miR-494 could also serve as a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of MIBC patients.
PMID: 31167152
ISSN: 1876-4320
CID: 3923462

miR-3687 Overexpression Promotes Bladder Cancer Cell Growth by Inhibiting the Negative Effect of FOXP1 on Cyclin E2 Transcription

Xie, Qipeng; Chen, Caiyi; Li, Haiying; Xu, Jiheng; Wu, Lei; Yu, Yuan; Ren, Shuwei; Li, Hongyan; Hua, Xiaohui; Yan, Huiying; Rao, Dapang; Zhang, Huxiang; Jin, Honglei; Huang, Haishan; Huang, Chuanshu
Cyclin E2, a member of the cyclin family, is a key cell cycle-related protein. This protein plays essential roles in cancer progression, and, as such, an inhibitor of cyclin E2 has been approved to treat several types of cancers. Even so, mechanisms underlying how to regulate cyclin E2 expression in cancer remain largely unknown. In the current study, miR-3687 was upregulated in clinical bladder cancer (BC) tumor tissues, The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database, and human BC cell lines. Inhibition of miR-3687 expression significantly reduced human BC cell proliferation in vitro and tumor growth in vivo, which coincided with the induction of G0/G1 cell cycle arrest and downregulation of cyclin E2 protein expression. Interestingly, overexpression of cyclin E2 reversed the inhibition of BC proliferation induced by miR-3687. Mechanistic studies suggested that miR-3687 binds to the 3' UTR of foxp1 mRNA, downregulates FOXP1 protein expression, and in turn promotes the transcription of cyclin E2, thereby promoting the growth of BC cells. Collectively, the current study not only establishes a novel regulatory axis of miR-3687/FOXP1 regarding regulation of cyclin E2 expression in BC cells, but also provides strong suggestive evidence that miR-3687 and FOXP1 may be promising targets in therapeutic strategies for human BC.
PMID: 30935821
ISSN: 1525-0024
CID: 3783912

NFκB2 p52 stabilizes rhogdiβ mRNA by inhibiting AUF1 protein degradation via a miR-145/Sp1/USP8-dependent axis

Xu, Jiawei; Hua, Xiaohui; Jin, Honglei; Zhu, Junlan; Li, Yang; Li, Jingxia; Huang, Chuangshu
Although overexpression of the non-canonical NFκB subunit p52 has been observed in several tumors, the function and mechanism of p52 in bladder cancer (BC) are less well understood. Here, we aimed at understanding the role and mechanism underlying p52 regulation of BC invasion. Human p52 was stably knockdown with shRNA targeting p52 in two bladder cancer cell lines (T24 and UMUC3). Two constitutively expressing constructs, p52 and p100, were stably transfected in to T24 or UMUC3, respectively. The stable transfectants were used to determine function and mechanisms responsible for p52 regulation of BC invasion. We demonstrate that p52 mediates human BC invasion. Knockdown of p52 impaired bladder cancer invasion by reduction of rhogdiβ mRNA stability and expression. Positively regulation of rhogdiβ mRNA stability was mediated by p52 promoting AUF1 protein degradation, consequently resulting in reduction of AUF1 binding to rhogdiβ mRNA. Further studies indicated that AUF1 protein degradation was mediated by upregulating USP8 transcription, which was modulated by its negative regulatory transcription factor Sp1. Moreover, we found that p52 upregulated miR-145, which directly bound to the 3'-UTR of sp1 mRNA, leading to downregulation of Sp1 protein translation. Our results reveal a comprehensive pathway that p52 acts as a positive regulator of BC invasion by initiating a novel miR-145/Sp1/USP8/AUF1/RhoGDIβ axis. These findings provide insight into the understanding of p52 in the pathology of human BC invasion and progression, which may be useful information in the development of preventive and therapeutic approaches for using p52 as a potential target.
PMID: 30604907
ISSN: 1098-2744
CID: 4504752

ATG7 Promotes Bladder Cancer Invasion via Autophagy-Mediated Increased ARHGDIB mRNA Stability

Zhu, Junlan; Tian, Zhongxian; Li, Yang; Hua, Xiaohui; Zhang, Dongyun; Li, Jingxia; Jin, Honglei; Xu, Jiheng; Chen, Wei; Niu, Beifang; Wu, Xue-Ru; Comincini, Sergio; Huang, Haishan; Huang, Chuanshu
Since invasive bladder cancer (BC) can progress to life threatening metastases, understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying BC invasion is crucial for potentially decreasing the mortality of this disease. Herein, it is discovered that autophagy-related gene 7 (ATG7) is remarkably overexpressed in human invasive BC tissues. The knockdown of ATG7 in human BC cells dramatically inhibits cancer cell invasion, revealing that ATG7 is a key player in regulating BC invasion. Mechanistic studies indicate that MIR190A is responsible for ATG7 mRNA stability and protein overexpression by directly binding to ATG7 mRNA 3'-UTR. Furthermore, ATG7-mediated autophagy promotes HNRNPD (ARE/poly(U)-binding/degradation factor 1) protein degradation, and in turn reduces HNRNPD interaction with ARHGDIB mRNA, resulting in the elevation of ARHGDIB mRNA stability, and subsequently leading to BC cell invasion. The identification of the MIR190A/ATG7 autophagic mechanism regulation of HNRNPD/ARHGDIB expression provides an important insight into understanding the nature of BC invasion and suggests that autophagy may represent a potential therapeutic strategy for the treatment of human BC patients.
PMCID:6468970
PMID: 31016112
ISSN: 2198-3844
CID: 3860032

MicroRNA-3648 Is Upregulated to Suppress TCF21, Resulting in Promotion of Invasion and Metastasis of Human Bladder Cancer

Sun, Wenrui; Li, Shi; Yu, Yuan; Jin, Honglei; Xie, Qipeng; Hua, Xiaohui; Wang, Shuai; Tian, Zhongxian; Zhang, Huxiang; Jiang, Guosong; Huang, Chuanshu; Huang, Haishan
Although microRNAs (miRNAs) are well-known for their potential in cancer, the function and mechanisms of miR-3648 have barely been explored in any type of cancer. We show here that miR-3648 is upregulated in human BC tissues in comparison with adjacent non-tumor tissues. Functional studies showed that inhibition of miR-3648 expression in the human invasive BC UMUC3 and T24T cell lines decreased migration and invasion in vitro and suppressed lung metastasis in vivo, whereas miR-3648 overexpression promoted BC cell migration and invasion. A bioinformatics screen and mRNA 3' UTR luciferase reporter assay showed that transcription factor 21 (TCF21) was a direct target of miR-3648, and the results obtained from using a miR-3648 inhibitor revealed that miR-3648 inhibited TCF21 protein expression by reduction of its mRNA stability. Further, Kisspeptin 1 (KISS1) was identified as a TCF21 downstream effector responsible for miR-3648-mediated BC invasion and lung metastasis. Collectively, the present results suggest that miR-3648 is overexpressed and plays an oncogenic role in mediation of BC invasion and metastasis through directing the TCF21/KISS1 axis, revealing miR-3648 as a potential biomarker for BC prognosis and a target for BC therapy.
PMCID:6506626
PMID: 31071528
ISSN: 2162-2531
CID: 3864742