| Literature DB >> 31309249 |
Ke Jin1,2,3, Shufei Wang2, Yazhuo Zhang2, Mengfang Xia2, Yongzhen Mo2, Xiaoling Li1,2,3, Guiyuan Li1,2,3, Zhaoyang Zeng1,2,3, Wei Xiong4,5,6, Yi He7,8.
Abstract
Numerous studies have shown that non-coding RNAs play crucial roles in the development and progression of various tumor cells. Plasmacytoma variant translocation 1 (PVT1) mainly encodes a long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) and is located on chromosome 8q24.21, which constitutes a fragile site for genetic aberrations. PVT1 is well-known for its interaction with its neighbor MYC, which is a qualified oncogene that plays a vital role in tumorigenesis. In the past several decades, increasing attention has been paid to the interaction mechanism between PVT1 and MYC, which will benefit the clinical treatment and prognosis of patients. In this review, we summarize the coamplification of PVT1 and MYC in cancer, the positive feedback mechanism, and the latest promoter competition mechanism of PVT1 and MYC, as well as how PVT1 participates in the downstream signaling pathway of c-Myc by regulating key molecules. We also briefly describe the treatment prospects and research directions of PVT1 and MYC.Entities:
Keywords: Enhancer; Gene fusion; MYC; PVT1; Positive feedback; Promoter
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31309249 PMCID: PMC6803569 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03222-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1Location of PVT1 and MYC on 8q24. EX exon, EN enhancer
Fusion genes of PVT1 in malignancy
| Cancer type | Fusion locus | Fusion gene | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colorectal cancer | 8q24/8q23.1 | [ | |
| 8q24/8q24.21 | [ | ||
| Neuroendocrine bladder cancer | 8q24/17q12 | [ | |
| Acute myeloid leukemia | 8q24/8q24.21 | [ | |
| 8q24/8q24.13 | [ | ||
| Gastric cancer | 8q24/11p13 | [ | |
| 8q24/10q26.13 | [ | ||
| 8q24/11p13 | [ | ||
| 8q24/10q26.12 | [ | ||
| Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm | 8q24/6p21 | [ | |
| Burkitt lymphoma | t(2,8)or t(8,22) | [ | |
| Small-cell lung cancer | 8q24/8q13.3 | [ | |
| 8q24/8q12 | [ | ||
| 8q24/1q44 | [ | ||
| Multiple myeloma | 8q24/13q13 | [ | |
| 8q24/16q23 | [ | ||
| Medulloblastoma | 8q24/8q24.21 | [ | |
| 8q24/8q24.3 | [ |
Fig. 2Positive feedback between PVT1 and MYC. C-Myc protein tends to be phosphorylated at the Thr-58 site by GSK3-β and then degraded by proteasome. However, PVT1 promotes c-Myc stability by inhibiting the degradation and phosphorylation of the Thr-58 site of c-Myc. Thus, c-Myc can return to the nucleus to interact with the PVT1 promoter, leading to the upregulation of PVT1. PVT1, the transcription product of PVT1, joins the positive feedback pathway to stabilize c-Myc protein
Fig. 3Promoter-enhancer competition between PVT1 and MYC.a When the PVT1 promoter functions normally, the internal enhancer of PVT1 (822E, 866E, 912E, 919E) tends to enhance the transcriptional efficiency of transcription factors starting from the PVT1 promoter. The transcription depends on phosphorylation of the Ser 2 site of Pol II by BRD4 after phosphorylation of the Ser 5 site and P-TEFb is recruited by BRD4 to restart transcription. b In breast cancer and malignant lymphoma cells, the PVT1 promoter sequence mutates, and the change in the topology enables the MYC promoter to interact with enhancer of PVT1 frequently, upregulating the expression of MYC will be
Fig. 4PVT1 participates in the downstream signaling pathway of c-Myc by regulating key molecules. In cancer cells, PVT1 not only exhibits a positive feedback interaction with c-Myc but also participates in the signal pathways downstream of c-Myc to promote the occurrence and development of tumors. PVT1 participates in the downstream signaling pathway of c-Myc by regulating the expression of key molecules. PVT1, similar to c-Myc, can promote tumor proliferation, angiogenesis, the EMT and the Warburg effect. Moreover, PVT1 may inhibit c-Myc-induced apoptosis by regulating caspase9, caspase3, and MDM. In this figure; the blue arrow indicates promotion/upregulation, while the black line indicates inhibition/downregulation