| Literature DB >> 26090994 |
Naoya Tatsumi1, Nozomi Hojo1, Hiroyuki Sakamoto1, Rena Inaba1, Nahoko Moriguchi1, Keiko Matsuno1, Mari Fukuda1, Akihide Matsumura2, Seiji Hayashi3, Soyoko Morimoto4, Jun Nakata5, Fumihiro Fujiki4, Sumiyuki Nishida6, Hiroko Nakajima4, Akihiro Tsuboi5, Yoshihiro Oka4, Naoki Hosen7, Haruo Sugiyama1, Yusuke Oji7.
Abstract
The Wilms' tumor gene WT1 consists of 10 exons and encodes a zinc finger transcription factor. There are four major WT1 isoforms resulting from alternative splicing at two sites, exon 5 (17AA) and exon 9 (KTS). All major WT1 isoforms are overexpressed in leukemia and solid tumors and play oncogenic roles such as inhibition of apoptosis, and promotion of cell proliferation, migration and invasion. In the present study, a novel alternatively spliced WT1 isoform that had an extended exon 4 (designated as exon 4a) with an additional 153 bp (designated as 4a sequence) at the 3' end was identified and designated as an Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform. The insertion of exon 4a resulted in the introduction of premature translational stop codons in the reading frame in exon 4a and production of C-terminal truncated WT1 proteins lacking zinc finger DNA-binding domain. Overexpression of the truncated Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform inhibited the major WT1-mediated transcriptional activation of anti-apoptotic Bcl-xL gene promoter and induced mitochondrial damage and apoptosis. Conversely, suppression of the Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform by Ex4a-specific siRNA attenuated apoptosis. These results indicated that the Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform exerted dominant negative effects on anti-apoptotic function of major WT1 isoforms. Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform was endogenously expressed as a minor isoform in myeloid leukemia and solid tumor cells and increased regardless of decrease in major WT1 isoforms during apoptosis, suggesting the dominant negative effects on anti-apoptotic function of major WT1 isoforms. These results indicated that Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform had an important physiological function that regulated oncogenic function of major WT1 isoforms.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26090994 PMCID: PMC4474557 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0130578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 2Cloning and sequence analysis of full-length Ex4a(+) WT1 isoform.
(A) 3’ rapid amplification of cDNA ends (3’ RACE) assay. Upper, 3’ RACE overview. cDNA was synthesized by using a 3’ RACE adaptor-dT primer. First PCR was performed by using exon 4a-specific forward and adaptor outer reverse primers. Second nested PCR was performed by using the first PCR product as a template with the nested Ex4a(+)WT1 cDNA-specific forward and the nested adaptor inner reverse primers. Lower, Agarose gel electrophoresis of the second nested PCR products is shown. Lane M, molecular marker (1 kbp DNA ladder). (B) Transcriptional start site of Ex4a(+)WT1. Upper, Schematic representation of the primer locations used to determine the transcriptional start site of Ex4a(+)WT1. Four (F1, F2, F3 and F4) and three (F5, F6, and F7) forward primers are located upstream and downstream, respectively, of the major transcriptional start site of WT1. Reverse primer (4a-R) is located in Exon 4a. The arrows indicate the primer positions used for PCR. +1 represents the major transcription start site of WT1. ATG indicates translational start codon. Lower, Agarose gel electrophoresis of PCR products amplified by using one each of 7 forward and 4a-R primers is shown. Lane M, molecular marker (1 kbp DNA ladder). (C) Alignment of nucleotide sequence of human 17AA(+)WT1 (upper lane) and Ex4a(+)WT1 (lower lane), and amino-acid (aa) sequences of exons 4 and 4a are shown. Asterisk indicates translational stop codon. Gaps are represented by dashes. The 4a sequence is marked in shaded grey. (D) Alignment of nucleotide sequence of the 4a and a part of intron 4 of WT1 in human, monkey, and mouse. The alignment is generated by CLUSTAL2.1 database with default parameters. The asterisks represent nucleotides identical to human and dashes represent an alignment gap. The 4a sequence of human WT1 is marked in shaded grey. Arrow indicates a novel alternative 5’ splice donor site. Genomic sequences of the exon 4a/intron 4 boundary region are highlighted in box.
Fig 4Expression of Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform in human cancer cells.
(A) Schematic representation of the WT1 exons and localization of the primers used for semi-quantitative RT-PCR (arrows) are shown. (B) Ex4a(+)WT1 mRNA expression was determined by RT–PCR using 4a-F and Ex6-R primer pair that amplifies only Ex4a(+)WT1 isoform in six different WT1-expressing cancer cells (AZ-521, HT-1080, LU99B, K562, Kasumi-1 and HL60) and one WT1-expressiong normal kidney cells 293. (C) Ex4a(+)WT1 mRNA expression in the paired samples of tumor (T) and normal tissues (N) of seven NSCLC was determined by RT-PCR as indicated in (B). (D) The ratio of Ex4a(+)WT1 to 17AA(+)WT1 isoforms was determined by RT–PCR using Ex4-F and Ex6-R primer pair that amplifies both Ex4a(+)WT1 and major WT1 isoforms in two different WT1-expressing cancer cells (LU99B and K562). (B-D) Actin is used as an internal control. Results are representative of three independent experiments.