| Literature DB >> 28102366 |
Aaron Mobley1, Shizhen Zhang2, Jolanta Bondaruk2, Yan Wang2, Tadeusz Majewski2, Nancy P Caraway2, Li Huang1, Einav Shoshan1, Guermarie Velazquez-Torres1, Giovanni Nitti1, Sangkyou Lee2, June Goo Lee2, Enrique Fuentes-Mattei2, Daniel Willis3, Li Zhang4, Charles C Guo1, Hui Yao4, Keith Baggerly4, Yair Lotan5, Seth P Lerner6, Colin Dinney3, David McConkey3, Menashe Bar-Eli1, Bogdan Czerniak2.
Abstract
The effects of AURKA overexpression associated with poor clinical outcomes have been attributed to increased cell cycle progression and the development of genomic instability with aneuploidy. We used RNA interference to examine the effects of AURKA overexpression in human bladder cancer cells. Knockdown had minimal effects on cell proliferation but blocked tumor cell invasion. Whole genome mRNA expression profiling identified nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT) as a downstream target that was repressed by AURKA. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and NNMT promoter luciferase assays revealed that AURKA's effects on NNMT were caused by PAX3-mediated transcriptional repression and overexpression of NNMT blocked tumor cell invasion in vitro. Overexpression of AURKA and activation of its downstream pathway was enriched in the basal subtype in primary human tumors and was associated with poor clinical outcomes. We also show that the FISH test for the AURKA gene copy number in urine yielded a specificity of 79.7% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 74.2% to 84.1%), and a sensitivity of 79.6% (95% CI = 74.2% to 84.1%) with an AUC of 0.901 (95% CI = 0.872 to 0.928; P < 0.001). These results implicate AURKA as an effective biomarker for bladder cancer detection as well as therapeutic target especially for its basal type.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28102366 PMCID: PMC5244380 DOI: 10.1038/srep40714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Effects of AURKA A on NNMT expression and cell invasion.
(a) Panel of bladder cancer cells shows different levels of AURKA expression in UC5, UC6, UC7, UC 9, UC10 and UC11 cell lines. Note low level of AURKA expression in cultured normal urothelial (NHU) cells. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S6. (b) Using a lentiviral shRNA construct AURKA was silenced by ~75% in UC7 and UC11 cells. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S6. (c) Heatmap of most significantly up- and down-regulated genes after silencing of AURKA in UC11 cell line. (d) AURKA was silenced using a lentiviral vector. Upon silencing, NNMT is upregulated by 3–4 fold in UC7 and UC11 cell lines. In contrast, overexpression of AURKA in UC5 cells resulted with downregulation of NNMT. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S6. (e) Upon silencing of AURKA cell invasion is decreased by ~3 fold in both UC7 and UC11 cells in a matrigel invasion assay (*P < 0.01). (f) A luciferase promoter analysis of NNMT reveals that NNMT’s upregulation is transcriptionally regulated in both cell lines upon silencing of AURKA (*P < 0.05). (g) AURKA KO UC7 and UC11 cells were treated with AURKA rescue vectors and western blot was performed to verify the rescue of AURKA and NNMT expression. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S6. (h) Quantitation of cell invasion through matrigel coated invasion chambers in AURKA silenced and rescued UC7 and UC11 cell lines (*P < 0.05). (i) Luciferase based promoter analysis of the NNMT promoter indicated that when AURKA is rescued, luciferase expression is returned to lower than normal levels in both UC7 and UC11cell lines (*P < 0.05). (j) Overexpression of AURKA in UC5 cells which resulted in downregulation of NNMT (see Fig. 1d) increased cell invasion in matrigel coated chambers. (k) NNMT was silenced 80–90% in UC7 and UC11 cell lines using lentiviral shRNA directed against NNMT. A reduction of NNMT expression was observed by western blot. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S6. (l) An increase in cell invasion was observed in both cell lines in NNMT shRNA treated cells when compared to NT shRNA (*P < 0.05).
Figure 2Transcriptional regulation of NNMT expression.
(a) An NNMT activity assay was performed on UC7 and UC11 cell lines. The activity of NNMT normalized to actin correlated with its expression levels (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01). (b) Western blotting revealed that expression levels of PAX3 decrease upon silencing of AURKA. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S7. (c) Schematic presentation of the NNMT promoter. Two PAX3 binding sites are located within 500 bp upstream of the NNMT transcription start site. (d) Chromatin immunoprecipitation indicates that PAX3 binds to the NNMT promoter and represses its expression in both UC7 (top) and UC11 (bottom) cell lines. Full length gels are shown in Supplementary Fig. S7. (e) Luciferase based promoter analysis of the NNMT promoter with mutations in either of the PAX3 binding sites leads to an increase in luciferase expression in the non-targeted (NT) cells to similar levels as the AURKA KO cells. Mutation at both sites together did not have an additive effect, indicating that both sites are necessary for suppression of NNMT transcription (*P < 0.05).
Figure 3Effects of AURKA and NNMT on MMPs expression.
(a) Western blots for MMP2 and MMP9 indicate an increase in both MMPs in NNMT KO cells and a decrease in both AURKA KO cells. Full length blots are shown in Supplementary Fig. S8. (b) Zymogram indicates increased levels of pro- and active forms of MMP2 in both UC7 and UC11 cell lines in NNMT KO cells, while a decrease in both pro- and active forms was observed in AURKA KO cells. Full length zymograms are shown in Supplementary Fig. S8. (c) MMP2 ELISA shows higher MMP2 levels in NNMT KO cells and lower levels in AURKA KO cells in both UC7 and UC11 cell lines (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01).
Figure 4Overexpression of AURKA and down-regulation of NNMT defines aggressive variant of bladder cancer.
(a) Expression levels of Aurora A and NNMT genes revealed by immunohistochemical staining in selected tumor samples from tissue microarray showing three paired patterns characteristic for three groups of invasive (T1 and higher) bladder cancer: GA (AURKA and NNMT with low expression), GB (AURKA and NNMT with high expression) and GC (AURKA with high expression and NNMT with low expression). (b) Kaplan-Meier analyses of disease-specific survivals in four groups of samples. Superficial (Ta) tumors were separated from invasive (T1 and higher). The invasive tumors were divided into three groups corresponding to samples with (1) low levels of AURKA expression (AURKA-L); (2) high levels of AURKA (AURKA-H), and high levels of NNMT (NNMT-H); and (3) high levels of AURKA (AURKA-H) and low levels of NNMT (NNMT-L). (c) Expression pattern of AURKA and AURKA signature genes in molecular subtypes of bladder cancer in the TCGA bladder cancer cohort comprising 128 high-grade muscle invasive bladder tumor samples which were classified into luminal, p53-like, and basal subtypes using the previously published algorithm. Subsets of samples with high levels of AURKA (AURKA-H) as well as subsets of samples showing overexpression of AURKA (AURKA-H) with downregulation of NNMT in molecular subtypes are shown. (d) Expression levels of AURKA and NNMT in luminal and basal subtypes of bladder cancer. (e) Proportions of cases with overexpression of AURKA (AURORA-H) and proportions of cases which show overexpression of AURKA (AURKA-H) with downregulation of NNMT (NNMT-L) in luminal and basal subtypes of bladder cancer. (f) Enrichment of AURKA downstream regulatory pathways in basal as compared to luminal subtypes of bladder cancer revealed by GSEA.
Figure 5Detection of bladder cancer cells in tissue and voided urine by FISH with a probe specific for AURKA.
(a) Dual-fluorescence FISH test with probes for AURKA (red) and the chromosome 20 α-satellite DNA (green) performed on 2 pairs of tissue and urine from the same patient with LGTCC and HGTCC respectively. Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI (blue). (b) Quantitative FISH analysis of AURKA gene copy numbers in tissue and voided urine specimens from 20 patients. The percentage of abnormal cells with more than 2 copies of AURKA in the individual patients is shown. (c) Mean percentage of cells with 3–4 copies and more than 4 copies of AURKA in matching tissue and urine samples from patients with LGTCC and HGTCC. (d) Average proportion of cells in voided urine showing 3–4 or more than 4 copies of AURKA in LGTCC and HGTCC detected in voided urine. (e) Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve for the set consisting of 232 urine samples from patients with bladder cancer and 255 urine samples from control subjects (126 healthy controls and 129 individuals with benign non-neoplastic disorders of the urinary tract). The AURKA FISH test for the detection of bladder cancer showed an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.895 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.984 to 1.000). (f) AURKA gene FISH score in voided urine by histological grade of TCC stratified into low and high groups. Horizontal bars designate the mean AURKA gene score for TCCs of low and high histological grade. P value was calculated from two-sided Mann–Whitney t test. (g) Kaplan-Meier analyses of overall survival in low-grade (G1-2) and high grade (G3) tumors according to AURKA score. (h) Kaplan-Meier analyses of overall survival in superficial (Ta) and invasive (T1 and >) tumors according to AURKA score. (i) Comparison of AURKA FISH test results with cytologic analyses of voided urine in 144 samples from patients with bladder cancer.