| Literature DB >> 27520449 |
Serena Di Cecilia1, Fan Zhang2, Ana Sancho3, SiDe Li4, Francesca Aguiló3, Yifei Sun3, Madhumitha Rengasamy3, Weijia Zhang2, Luigi Del Vecchio5, Francesco Salvatore5, Martin J Walsh6.
Abstract
Cancer-initiating cells (CIC) undergo asymmetric growth patterns that increase phenotypic diversity and drive selection for chemotherapeutic resistance and tumor relapse. WNT signaling is a hallmark of colon CIC, often caused by APC mutations, which enable activation of β-catenin and MYC Accumulating evidence indicates that long noncoding RNAs (lncRNA) contribute to the stem-like character of colon cancer cells. In this study, we report enrichment of the lncRNA RBM5-AS1/LUST during sphere formation of colon CIC. Its silencing impaired WNT signaling, whereas its overexpression enforced WNT signaling, cell growth, and survival in serum-free media. RBM5-AS1 has been little characterized previously, and we determined it to be a nuclear-retained transcript that selectively interacted with β-catenin. Mechanistic investigations showed that silencing or overexpression of RBM5-AS1 caused a respective loss or retention of β-catenin from TCF4 complexes bound to the WNT target genes SGK1, YAP1, and MYC Our work suggests that RBM5-AS1 activity is critical for the functional enablement of colon cancer stem-like cells. Furthermore, it defines the mechanism of action of RBM5-AS1 in the WNT pathway via physical interactions with β-catenin, helping organize transcriptional complexes that sustain colon CIC function. Cancer Res; 76(19); 5615-27. ©2016 AACR. ©2016 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27520449 PMCID: PMC5050123 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-15-1824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701