| Literature DB >> 28881805 |
Xu Hu1, Chao Zhang1, Ying Zhang1, Christopher S Hong2, Wugui Chen1, Weiwei Shen1, Hongkai Wang1, Jianrong He1, Pei Chen1, Yue Zhou1, Chunmeng Shi3, Tongwei Chu1.
Abstract
Osteosarcoma is a kind of primary malignant bone tumor with the highest incidence and an extraordinarily poor prognosis and early pulmonary metastasis formation as a frequent occurrence. Transcriptional positive coactivator 4 (PC4) has multiple functions in DNA replication, transcription, repair and chromatin organization, even in tumorigenesis. However, the precise function of PC4 in osteosarcoma is still unclear and controversial. In this paper we found PC4 was upregulated in patient-derived osteosarcoma tissues compared to normal. Moreover, higher expression of PC4 was correlated with poorer overall survival and advanced clinicopathological tumor staging. Down regulation of PC4 in the highly metastatic osteosarcoma cells reduced the malignant behaviors in vitro and in vivo. Analyzing the downstream genes affected obviously by shPC4 with RNA sequencing, we found knocking down PC4 will inhibit the propensity for lung metastasis through transcriptional suppression of MMPs pathways. Taken together, PC4 may be an attractive therapeutic strategy for osteosarcoma, especially in preventing lung metastasis formation.Entities:
Keywords: MMP; PC4; SP1; pulmonary metastasis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28881805 PMCID: PMC5581104 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.18290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Increased expression of PC4 protein in osteosarcoma tissues
(A) Immunohistochemical staining of PC4 expression in osteosarcoma. PC4 was mainly located in cell nucleus. (B) Average immnohistochemical staining scores of PC4 expression from 198 osteosarcoma tissues and 44 adjacent normal tissues. PC4 was highly expressed in osteosarcoma. (*p < 0.01). (C) Western blotting analysis of PC4 expression of 5 osteosarcoma patients (A1-A5) and the adjacent normal tissues (T1-T5). (D) Immnohistochemical staining analysis of PC4 expression in different pathological stages. IIA group was higher than IB group (*p < 0.05), III group was higher than IIA group (**p < 0.05). (E) Statistical analysis of correlation between PC4 expression level and the survival of osteosarcoma patients (PC4+, n=43; PC4−, n=16; p < 0.01) (Kaplan-Meier survival curves).
Relationship between PC4 expression and clinicopathological characteristics of osteosarcoma patients
| PC4 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low or none | High | ||
| Total osteosarcoma patients | 38 | 160 | |
| Sex | >0.05 | ||
| Male | 15 | 71 | |
| Female | 23 | 89 | |
| Age | >0.05 | ||
| < 40 | 25 | 125 | |
| ≥ 40 | 13 | 35 | |
| Enneking stages | <0.01 | ||
| IA | 4 | 5 | |
| IB | 11 | 15 | |
| IIA | 5 | 22 | |
| IIB | 15 | 101 | |
| III | 3 | 17 | |
| Tumor size | <0.01 | ||
| ≤ 8 cm | 21 | 51 | |
| > 8 cm | 17 | 109 | |
Figure 2Expression of PC4 in osteosarcoma cells and malignant phenotype of different osteosarcoma cell lines
(A) Immunofluorescent staining of PC4. PC4 (red), DAPI (blue). (B) Western blotting analysis of PC4 expression level in seven osteosarcoma cell lines. GAPDH served as control. (C, D) Spheroid development in semisolid soft agar medium after 7 days, which cells were grown in six-well plates with triple replications. (E, F) Tumorigenicity of five osteosarcoma cell lines. Grow for 5 weeks in nude mice (n=3 mice in each group). Mice were injected with 5*106 cells. All the cells developed a visible tumor except HOS group. (G-J) Quantitative RT-PCR test of PC4 and malignant phenotype related genes in different osteosarcoma cell lines (*comparing with 143B p<0.05).
Figure 3Stable knockdown of PC4 and the accompanied malignant phenotype change
(A) Western blotting analysis of PC4 knockdown efficiency in 143B cells. (B) Cell proliferation assays show slight inhibition by lv-shRNA-PC4 (*p<0.01). (C) Cell cycle distribution of 143B cells with lv-shRNA transfection (*p<0.05). (D) Cell attachment assay. 2*104 cells were seeded into 96-well culture plates, and incubated at 37°C for 30 min or 60 min or 120min or 24 hours. After incubation, unattached cells were washed with PBS, and adherent cells were counted with CCK-8 kits, (*p<0.01). (E, F) Spheroid development in semisolid soft agar medium after 7 days. 143B showed decreased efficiency of sphere-forming in 143BPC4−group. Spheres were counted in five random fields of vision. (G) Invasion assay. 143B cells seeded on the upper chamber with pre-coated matrigel for 24 hours. Cells on the underside of the membrane were fixed, stained with crystal violet. (H, I) Effect of lv-shRNA-PC4 on 143B cell migration by wound-healing assay. The 143B cells were seeded in 6-well plates for 24h, after cell reached 100% density wounds were created. Cell migration was observed at 0h, 24h, 48h, and 72h after wounding. The migration distance was calculated as the width at indicated time (*p<0.05 versus control).
Figure 4Tumorigenicity of osteosarcoma cells with stable knockdown of PC4
(A) Excised all tumors in nude mice at day 27 when the biggest tumor volume reach 2000 mm3. (B) Tumor volume of 143B xenografts. 143BPC4− group had a regression compared with control (*P<0.05). (C) Body weight of nude mice. (D) Excised Tumor weight (*P<0.05). (E) Excised lung in nude mice when tumor volume reach 2000 mm3. Photographs of lungs of each group. Arrow shows the metastasis. Representative lungs H&E staining of each group. (F) Visible lung metastasis number of each group (*P<0.05).
Top 10 up- and down- represented genes after PC4 knocking down in 143B cell
| Gene | GeneID | Description | log2 Ratio | Gene_length | P-value | FDR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DRD5 | 1816 | Dopamine receptor D5 | 7.80382017 | 2398 | 2.67E-13 | 2.84E-12 |
| INHBE | 83729 | Inhibin, beta E | 6.757445414 | 2453 | 1.22E-61 | 6.70E-60 |
| CTH | 1491 | Cystathionase (cystathionine gamma-lyase) | 6.182881406 | 2140 | 0 | 0 |
| FAM90A1 | 55138 | Family with sequence similarity 90, member A1 | 6.07740762 | 2516 | 0.000102221 | 0.000435026 |
| MEIS1-AS3 | 730198 | An RNA Gene, and is affiliated with the non-coding RNA class. | 5.915134907 | 4115 | 1.48E-06 | 8.22E-06 |
| LGR6 | 59352 | Leucine-rich repeat containing G protein-coupled receptor 6 | 5.825052551 | 3458 | 2.49E-05 | 0.000117228 |
| MKX | 283078 | Mohawk homeobox | 5.736785943 | 3658 | 3.16E-15 | 3.88E-14 |
| ESRP1 | 54845 | Epithelial splicing regulatory protein 1 | 5.480263981 | 3806 | 0.000102221 | 0.000434922 |
| ATF3 | 467 | Activating transcription factor 3 | 4.908885316 | 2400 | 6.00E-127 | 7.54E-125 |
| CHAC1 | 79094 | ChaC, cation transport regulator homolog 1 (E. coli) | 4.469583903 | 1578 | 1.31E-248 | 4.56E-246 |
| CXCL1 | 2919 | Chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 1 | −10.12824838 | 1207 | 4.70E-32 | 1.28E-30 |
| KRT75 | 9119 | Keratin 75 | −8.365650472 | 2125 | 5.59E-17 | 7.69E-16 |
| SERPINA3 | 12 | Serpin peptidase inhibitor, clade A | −8.215694509 | 1629 | 5.93E-12 | 5.67E-11 |
| MMP9 | 4318 | Matrix metallopeptidase 9 | −8.197914746 | 2387 | 5.59E-17 | 7.69E-16 |
| IL1B | 3553 | Interleukin 1, beta | −8.158410629 | 1498 | 2.60E-169 | 5.12E-167 |
| WNT7A | 7476 | Wingless-type MMTV integration site family, member 7A | −7.923708789 | 1732 | 1.78E-10 | 1.51E-09 |
| STRA6 | 64220 | Stimulated by retinoic acid gene 6 homolog (mouse) | −7.923525266 | 3097 | 3.68E-18 | 5.42E-17 |
| CCL2 | 6347 | Chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 | −7.664093493 | 760 | 3.47E-60 | 1.84E-58 |
| BCHE | 590 | Butyrylcholinesterase | −7.620436455 | 2461 | 5.93E-12 | 5.66E-11 |
| NAP1L3 | 4675 | Nucleosome assembly protein 1-like 3 | −7.454490225 | 2761 | 5.93E-12 | 5.66E-11 |
KEGG pathway enrichment analysis of different express genes
| Pathway | DEGs withpathwayannotation(906) | All geneswith pathwayannotation(17252) | P-value | Q-value | Pathway IDof KEGG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p53 signaling pathway | 23 (2.54%) | 143 (0.83%) | 1.52172E-06 | 0.000413907 | ko04115 |
| Axon guidance | 34 (3.75%) | 308 (1.79%) | 3.53746E-05 | 0.004810942 | ko04360 |
| Isoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis | 6 (0.66%) | 16 (0.09%) | 0.000104847 | 0.009506101 | ko00950 |
| Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism | 12 (1.32%) | 71 (0.41%) | 0.0002982 | 0.019414805 | ko00260 |
| Tropane, piperidine and pyridine alkaloid Biosynthesis | 5 (0.55%) | 13 (0.08%) | 0.00035689 | 0.019414805 | ko00960 |
| Malaria | 12 (1.32%) | 76 (0.44%) | 0.000568131 | 0.025755258 | ko05144 |
| Fatty acid biosynthesis | 5 (0.55%) | 15 (0.09%) | 0.000762581 | 0.029631699 | ko00061 |
| Tyrosine metabolism | 12 (1.32%) | 81 (0.47%) | 0.001018911 | 0.034642974 | ko00350 |
| Phenylalanine metabolism | 7 (0.77%) | 33 (0.19%) | 0.001383711 | 0.041818821 | ko00360 |
| MAPK signaling pathway | 36 (3.97%) | 425 (2.46%) | 0.003285155 | 0.083304921 | ko04010 |
| Legionellosis | 13 (1.43%) | 105 (0.61%) | 0.003368949 | 0.083304921 | ko05134 |
| Alanine, aspartate and glutamate metabolism | 8 (0.88%) | 57 (0.33%) | 0.009438303 | 0.213934868 | ko00250 |
| Neurotrophin signaling pathway | 22 (2.43%) | 248 (1.44%) | 0.01151266 | 0.240880271 | ko04722 |
| Cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction | 26 (2.87%) | 317 (1.84%) | 0.01654431 | 0.300741515 | ko04060 |
| Methane metabolism | 7 (0.77%) | 51 (0.3%) | 0.01658501 | 0.300741515 | ko00680 |
| NOD-like receptor signaling pathway | 14 (1.55%) | 144 (0.83%) | 0.01932437 | 0.315335493 | ko04621 |
| Measles | 17 (1.88%) | 188 (1.09%) | 0.02056757 | 0.315335493 | ko05162 |
| Cocaine addiction | 10 (1.1%) | 91 (0.53%) | 0.02086779 | 0.315335493 | ko05030 |
| Vitamin B6 metabolism | 3 (0.33%) | 12 (0.07%) | 0.02223889 | 0.318367267 | ko00750 |
| Carbon fixation in photosynthetic organisms | 5 (0.55%) | 32 (0.19%) | 0.02445567 | 0.332597112 | ko00710 |
| ECM-receptor interaction | 22 (2.43%) | 269 (1.56%) | 0.02667029 | 0.345443756 | ko04512 |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 11 (1.21%) | 115 (0.67%) | 0.0392752 | 0.485584291 | ko05323 |
Gene ontology functional classification of differentially expressed genes
| Gene Ontology term | Cluster frequency | Genome frequency of use | Corrected P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Molecular function | |||
| Protein binding | 299 out of 837 genes, 35.7% | 4282 out of 15165 genes, 28.2% | 0.00026 |
| Binding | 710 out of 837 genes, 84.8% | 12079 out of 15165 genes, 79.7% | 0.0168 |
| Cellular component | |||
| Cell junction | 37 out of 858 genes, 4.3% | 351 out of 16090 genes, 2.2% | 0.01023 |
| Extracellular matrix | 33 out of 858 genes, 3.8% | 312 out of 16090 genes, 1.9% | 0.0488 |
| Biological process | |||
| Locomotion | 91 out of 811 genes, 11.2% | 838 out of 14596 genes, 5.7% | 6.13E-07 |
| Anatomical structure development | 232 out of 811 genes, 28.6% | 2997 out of 14596 genes, 20.5% | 1.73E-05 |
| Response to chemical stimulus | 163 out of 811 genes, 20.1% | 1934 out of 14596 genes, 13.3% | 2.28E-05 |
| Developmental process | 262 out of 811 genes, 32.3% | 3517 out of 14596 genes, 24.1% | 4.81E-05 |
| Cell motility | 62 out of 811 genes, 7.6% | 538 out of 14596 genes, 3.7% | 5.36E-05 |
| Localization of cell | 62 out of 811 genes, 7.6% | 538 out of 14596 genes, 3.7% | 5.36E-05 |
| Response to external stimulus | 81 out of 811 genes, 10.0% | 787 out of 14596 genes, 5.4% | 6.90E-05 |
| Cellular component movement | 62 out of 811 genes, 7.6% | 568 out of 14596 genes, 3.9% | 0.00038 |
| Response to lipid | 47 out of 811 genes, 5.8% | 382 out of 14596 genes, 2.6% | 0.00038 |
| Multicellular organismal development | 204 out of 811 genes, 25.2% | 2681 out of 14596 genes, 18.4% | 0.00075 |
| Positive regulation of biological process | 135 out of 811 genes, 16.6% | 1642 out of 14596 genes, 11.2% | 0.00215 |
| Cell migration | 49 out of 811 genes, 6.0% | 431 out of 14596 genes, 3.0% | 0.00226 |
| System development | 184 out of 811 genes, 22.7% | 2407 out of 14596 genes, 16.5% | 0.00252 |
| Signaling | 281 out of 811 genes, 34.6% | 3999 out of 14596 genes, 27.4% | 0.003 |
| Response to stimulus | 351 out of 811 genes, 43.3% | 5195 out of 14596 genes, 35.6% | 0.00318 |
| Single-organism developmental process | 153 out of 811 genes, 18.9% | 1940 out of 14596 genes, 13.3% | 0.00433 |
| Anatomical structure morphogenesis | 106 out of 811 genes, 13.1% | 1236 out of 14596 genes, 8.5% | 0.00554 |
| Response to oxygen levels | 9 out of 811 genes, 1.1% | 25 out of 14596 genes, 0.2% | 0.00701 |
| Response to organic substance | 99 out of 811 genes, 12.2% | 1141 out of 14596 genes, 7.8% | 0.00736 |
| Positive regulation of cellular process | 114 out of 811 genes, 14.1% | 1364 out of 14596 genes, 9.3% | 0.00772 |
| Cell proliferation | 77 out of 811 genes, 9.5% | 836 out of 14596 genes, 5.7% | 0.01147 |
| Cellular developmental process | 135 out of 811 genes, 16.6% | 1706 out of 14596 genes, 11.7% | 0.01616 |
| Anatomical structure formation involved in morphogenesis | 48 out of 811 genes, 5.9% | 450 out of 14596 genes, 3.1% | 0.01683 |
| Biological regulation | 421 out of 811 genes, 51.9% | 6523 out of 14596 genes, 44.7% | 0.0206 |
| Intracellular signal transduction | 96 out of 811 genes, 11.8% | 1125 out of 14596 genes, 7.7% | 0.02067 |
| Regulation of metabolic process | 198 out of 811 genes, 24.4% | 2717 out of 14596 genes, 18.6% | 0.0225 |
| Enzyme linked receptor protein signaling pathway | 66 out of 811 genes, 8.1% | 698 out of 14596 genes, 4.8% | 0.02319 |
| Response to organic cyclic compound | 44 out of 811 genes, 5.4% | 405 out of 14596 genes, 2.8% | 0.02487 |
| Response to molecule of bacterial origin | 23 out of 811 genes, 2.8% | 157 out of 14596 genes, 1.1% | 0.02983 |
| Chemotaxis | 44 out of 811 genes, 5.4% | 408 out of 14596 genes, 2.8% | 0.02987 |
Figure 5PC4 binds with SP1 and regulate the transcription of MMP9
(A) The mRNA expression levels of PC4, MMP9, MMP2, and FN after lv-shRNA-PC4 transfected in seven osteosarcoma cells. All the cell lines were compared to parental cells respectively (*P<0.05). (B) 143B treated with 35ug/ml FN protein for 4h or FN siRNA, the mRNA expression levels of MMP9, MMP2 (*P<0.05). (C) MG63 treated with FN protein or FN siRNA, the mRNA expression levels of MMP9, MMP2 (*P<0.05). (D) Luciferase reporter. PMA was used as an inducer for MMP9 luciferase activity. Both PC4 siRNA and SP1 siRNA decrease the luciferase activity of MMP9 promoter region, and PC4 siRNA and SP1 siRNA have the combined effect (*P<0.05, **P<0.05). (E) Quantitative ChIP assay of endogenous PC4 interact with MMP9 promoter region in 143B cells. MMP9 cDNA was detectable in the immunoprecipitated chromatin samples of 143B cells using a PC4 antibody, suggesting PC4 binds to the MMP9 promoter region. The same amount of isotype antibody was used as control (IgG), as well as no antibody controls (Negative control). RT-PCR results are expressed as percentages of the total input DNA (*P<0.05). (F) PC4 binds to SP1 in 143B. 143B cell extracts protein was used. Co-Immunoprecipitation was performed using PC4 antibody and SP1 antibody, IgG as control.