| Literature DB >> 33452458 |
Wei Kang1,2,3, Jinglin Zhang4,5,6, Tingting Huang4,5,6, Yuhang Zhou4,5,6, Chi Chun Wong5, Ronald C K Chan4, Yujuan Dong5, Feng Wu4, Bin Zhang7, William K K Wu8, Michael W Y Chan9, Alfred S L Cheng10, Jun Yu5,11, Nathalie Wong4,6, Kwok Wai Lo4,6, Ka Fai To12,13,14.
Abstract
Aberrant Notch activation has been implicated in multiple malignancies and the identification of NOTCH receptors and related pathways is critical for targeted therapy. In this study, we aim to delineate the most prominent dysregulated NOTCH receptor and comprehensively reveal its deregulation in gastric cancer (GC). In the four Notch members, NOTCH3 was found uniformly upregulated and associated with poor clinical outcomes in multiple GC datasets. siRNA-mediated NOTCH3 knockdown demonstrated antitumor effects by suppressing cell proliferation, inhibiting monolayer formation, and impairing cell invasion abilities. Its depletion also induced early and late apoptosis. NOTCH3 was confirmed to be a direct target of two tumor suppressor microRNAs (miRNAs), namely miR-491-5p and miR-875-5p. The activation of NOTCH3 is partly due to the silence of these two miRNAs. Through RNA-seq profiling and functional validation, PHLDB2 was identified as a potent functional downstream modulator for NOTCH3 in gastric carcinogenesis. PHLDB2 expression demonstrated a positive correlation with NOTCH3, but was negatively correlated with miR-491-5p. Akt-mTOR was revealed as the downstream signaling of PHLDB2. The NOTCH3-PHLDB2-Akt co-activation was found in 33.7% GC patients and the activation of this axis predicted poor clinical outcome. GC cells treated with siNOTCH3, siPHLDB2, miR-491-5p, miR-875-5p, were more sensitive to Cisplatin and 5-FU. Taken together, the NOTCH3-PHLDB2-Akt cascade plays oncogenic role in gastric carcinogenesis and serves as a therapeutic target. Our study provided insights into Notch-mediated underlying molecular mechanisms and implied translational potential.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33452458 PMCID: PMC7932926 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-020-01579-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867