| Literature DB >> 26198250 |
Mark R Pickard1, Gwyn T Williams2.
Abstract
It is increasingly recognised that lncRNAs play essential regulatory roles in fundamental biological processes and, consequently, that their dysregulation may contribute to major human diseases, including cancer. Better understanding of lncRNA biology may therefore offer new insights into pathogenetic mechanisms and thereby offer novel opportunities for diagnosis and therapy. Of particular interest in this regard is GAS5 lncRNA, which is down-regulated in multiple cancers, with expression levels related to both clinico-pathological characteristics and patient prognosis. Functional studies have further shown that GAS5 lncRNA both inhibits the proliferation and promotes the apoptosis of multiple cell types, and that together these cellular mechanisms of action are likely to form the basis of its tumour suppressor action. At the same time, advances have been made in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of GAS5 lncRNA action in recent years, including riborepression of certain steroid hormone receptors and sequestration of miR-21, impacting key regulatory pathways of cell survival. Overall this accumulating knowledge has the potential to improve both the diagnosis and treatment of cancer, and ultimately patient outcome.Entities:
Keywords: GAS5; apoptosis; cancer; cell proliferation; lncRNA; tumour suppressor
Year: 2015 PMID: 26198250 PMCID: PMC4584312 DOI: 10.3390/genes6030484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Genomic context, gene structure and selected products of the human GAS5 gene. For genomic context, HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee (HGNC) approved gene symbols are used, with the corresponding HGNC identity number given below each symbol. Exon/intron structure is based on published data [6]; note the presence of two alternative 5′-splice donor sites in exon 7. The two possible resulting mature lncRNAs are termed GAS5b (contains exon 7b and corresponds to the GAS5 reference sequence, NR_002578.2) and GAS5a (contains exon 7a); the latter is predicted to be 39 bases shorter than GAS5a (based on [6] and GenBank: AF141346.1). The additional GAS5 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) shown here have all been reported to induce growth arrest in lymphoid cell lines [10].
Figure 2Interplay between mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) regulates cellular GAS5 lncRNA levels.
GAS5 expression in human cancer. ↓ and ↑ = down- and up-regulated expression, respectively, in the indicated cancer tissues/model systems; → = leading to; TNM = cancer staging system of the International Union for Cancer Control (UICC) which takes into account the primary tumour (T), lymph nodes (N) and metastases (M)—a higher stage indicates a more advanced cancer; FIGO = comparable staging system of the International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians (FIGO) for cancers of the female reproductive organs.
| Cancer | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Breast | ↓ Patient tissue/cell lines; poor patient survivalGAS5 inhibits xenograft tumour growth | [ |
| Prostate | ↓ Xenografts as cells acquire castrate-resistance | [ |
| Head/neck squamous cell | ↓ Patient tissue; poor patient survival | [ |
| Glioblastoma multiforme | ↓ Patient tissue; poor patient survival | [ |
| Renal clear cell | ↓ Patient tissue/cell lines | [ |
| Bladder | ↓ Patient tissue/cell lines | [ |
| Hepatocellular | ↓ Patient tissue → increased tumour size/clinical stage/lymph node spread; poor patient survival | [ |
| Pancreatic | ↓ Patient tissue/cell lines | [ |
| Non small cell lung | ↓ Patient tissue/cell lines → increased tumour size/TNM stage GAS5 inhibits xenograft tumour growth | [ |
| Mesothelioma | ↑ Patient tissue; ↓ Cell lines | [ |
| Gastric | ↓ Patient tissue/cell lines → increased tumour size/TNM stage/invasion/regional lymph nodes; poor patient survival GAS5 inhibits xenograft tumour growth | [ |
| Colorectal | ↓ Patient tissue → increased tumour size/TNM stage; lower grade; poor patient survival | [ |
| Cervical | ↓ Patient tissue → increased FIGO stage/lymph node spread/vascular invasion; poor patient survival | [ |
| Adrenocortical | ↓ Patient tissue; unrelated to recurrence | [ |
| Multiple myeloma | ↓ Patient plasma | [ |
Figure 3Summary of biological processes that are regulated by GAS5 lncRNA, including possible downstream molecular targets. ↓ and ↑ = down- and up-regulation, respectively.
Apoptotic stimuli which require GAS5 lncRNA for their action.
| Treatment | Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|
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| Ultraviolet-C irradiation | Breast: MCF10A, MCF7, T47D & MDA-MB-231 cells | [ |
| Prostate: 22Rv1 cells | [ | |
| Kidney: HEK293T cells | [ | |
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| Cisplatin | Breast: MCF10A, MCF7 cells | [ |
| Kidney: HEK293T cells | [ | |
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| Docetaxel | Breast: MCF7 & T47D cells | [ |
| Prostate: 22Rv1 cells | [ | |
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| Doxorubicin | Breast: MCF10A, MCF7 cells | [ |
| Mitoxantrone | Prostate: 22Rv1 cells | [ |
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| 5-Fluorouracil | Breast: MCF7, T47D | [ |
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| Dexamethasone | Lymphoid: CEM-C7 | [ |
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| Nutlin-3a | Prostate: 22Rv1 cells | [ |
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| Gefitinib | Lung: A549 cells & xenografts | [ |
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| Rapamycin/rapalogues | Lymphoid: CEM-C7, MOLT4, Jeko-1 & Z-138 cells; | [ |
| primary T-lymphocytes | ||
| Prostate: 22Rv1, LNCaP, PC3 & DU145 cells | [ | |
| AZD8055, BEZ235 | Prostate: 22Rv1, LNCaP, PC3 & DU145 cells | [ |