| Literature DB >> 26492273 |
Kalpana Kannan1,2, Gona Karimi Kordestani3,4, Anika Galagoda5, Cristian Coarfa6,7, Laising Yen8,9,10,11.
Abstract
High-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC) is among the most lethal forms of cancer in women. By analyzing the mRNA-seq reads from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we uncovered a novel cancer-enriched chimeric RNA as the result of splicing between MUC1, a highly glycosylated transmembrane mucin, TRIM46, a tripartite motif containing protein, and KRTCAP2, a keratinocyte associated protein. Experimental analyses by RT-PCR (reverse transcription PCR) and Sanger sequencing using an in-house cohort of 59 HGSC patient tumors revealed a total of six MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 isoforms joined by different annotated splice sites between these genes. These chimeric isoforms are not detected in non-cancerous ovaries, yet are present in three out of every four HGSC patient tumors, a significant frequency given the exceedingly heterogeneous nature of this disease. Transfection of the cDNA of MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 isoforms in mammalian cells led to the translation of mutant MUC1 fusion proteins that are unglycosylated and cytoplasmically localized as opposed to the cell membrane, a feature resembling the tumor-associated MUC1. Because the parental MUC1 is overexpressed in 90% of HGSC tumors and has been proposed as a clinical biomarker and therapeutic target, the chimeric MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 isoforms identified in this report could represent significantly better MUC1 variants for the same clinical utilities.Entities:
Keywords: MUC1; RNA-seq; TCGA; chimeric RNA; high-grade serous ovarian cancer
Year: 2015 PMID: 26492273 PMCID: PMC4695878 DOI: 10.3390/cancers7040878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1MUC1 chimeric RNAs identified in TCGA database of HGSC patient samples. (A) Schematic showing the position of 25 paired chimeric reads aligning to both MUC1 and TRIM46 genes identified from nine patients in the 130 TCGA cohort. Arrows indicate PCR primer targeting locations. (B) An example of RT-PCR validation for MUC1-TRIM46 chimeric RNA using one of the in-house HGSC patient samples. The bands corresponding to the six isoforms are labeled as shown.
Figure 2MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 chimeric RNA isoforms and predicted protein consequences. (A) Schematic of the parental MUC1 and the six isoforms of MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 chimeric RNAs are shown with MUC1 (red), TRIM46 (blue) and KRTCAP2 (green) regions. The indicated coding and non-coding regions of MUC1 are based on the annotation of specific transcripts in the UCSC genome browser. (B) The expected protein products of these chimeric RNAs are shown with the domains indicated.
Figure 3MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 is a highly recurrent chimeric RNA in HGSC patient tumor samples and cell lines. (A) The results of RT-PCR for MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 in 59 HGSC tumor samples (denoted by “S”). (B) The results of 24 non-cancerous ovary samples (“OV”) are shown. NTC refers to “no cDNA control”. The different isoforms are indicated on samples S61 and S63. (C) The results of RT-PCR for MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 in three HGSC cell lines (ES2, OV90 and OVCAR8) are shown.
Figure 4MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 chimeric RNAs give rise to fusion proteins. (A) MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2 isoforms were cloned with a C-terminal FLAG tag and expressed in OVCAR8 cells. Western blot of protein extracts using FLAG antibody shows that most of the isoforms are translated with the expected sizes lacking glycosylation. Isoform 5 appears to form a homodimer. (B) Immunocytochemistry of OVCAR8 cells transfected with different MUC1-TRIM46-KRTCAP2-FLAG expression constructs. The fusion protein isoforms are seen mainly in the cytoplasm as visualized by FLAG antibody. Images were taken using deconvolution microscopy.