| Literature DB >> 34785680 |
Mitsuhito Koizumi1, Takao Watanabe1, Junya Masumoto2, Kotaro Sunago1, Yoshiki Imamura1, Kozue Kanemitsu1, Teru Kumagi1,3, Yoichi Hiasa4.
Abstract
Apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain (ASC) is a key adaptor protein of inflammasomes and a proapoptotic molecule; however, its roles in signal transduction in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cells remain unknown. Here, we clarified the role and mechanisms of action of ASC in PDAC using clinical evidence and in vitro data. ASC expression in PDAC tissues was analyzed using public tumor datasets and immunohistochemistry results of patients who underwent surgery, and PDAC prognosis was investigated using the Kaplan-Meier Plotter. ASC expression in PDAC cells was downregulated using small-interfering RNA, and gene expression was assessed by RNA sequencing. Review of the Oncomine database and immunostaining of surgically removed tissues revealed elevated ASC expression in PDAC tumors relative to non-tumor tissue, indicating poor prognosis. We observed high ASC expression in multiple PDAC cells, with ASC silencing subsequently inhibiting PDAC cell growth and altering the expression of cell cycle-related genes. Specifically, ASC silencing reduced cyclin D1 levels and stopped the cell cycle at the G1 phase but did not modulate the expression of any apoptosis-related molecules. These results show that ASC inhibited tumor progression via cell cycle modulation in PDAC cells and could be a potential therapeutic target.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34785680 PMCID: PMC8595714 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-01465-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1ASC expression according to Oncomine and clinical PDAC tissues. (a) Relative expression of ASC in normal/benign pancreas tissue (N) versus PDAC (T) according to six independent profiling datasets (surveyed using Oncomine). (b) Evaluation of ASC expression in human PDAC tissue according to IHC analysis. Data were generated from three representative PDAC tissues expressing various ASC levels and determined using the anti-ASC antibody. Scale bar: 200 μm. (c) IHC intensity score among 20 evaluated patients. (d) Immune-reaction intensity according to the OD and determined using ImageJ (n = 20). Error bars indicate the standard error of the mean based on eight independent experiments. (e–g) Expression of ASC protein in pancreatic tissue distant form the tumor (e), tissue surrounding the PDAC tissue (f), and PDAC tissue (g) according to IHC analysis. Scale bar: 100 μm.
Figure 2OS evaluated between PDAC patients with high and low expression of ASC. (a) OS of all PDAC patients (n = 177) and those with (b) high TMB (n = 84) and (c) low TMB (n = 83). (d) OS of PDAC patients with histological grade 1 (n = 31), (e) grade 2 (n = 94), and (f) grade 3 (n = 48) tumors. TMB tumor mutation burden.
Figure 3ASC expression in human PDAC cells. Four human PDAC cell lines and one human pancreatic duct cell line were used to screen levels of ASC mRNA and protein expression using quantitative real-time RT-PCR and western blot. (a) ASC mRNA expression. Data represent the mean ± standard error of the mean of four replicates. (b) ASC protein expression. The original gel images of Western blotting are shown in Fig. S6.
Figure 4Changes in PDAC cells following ASC silencing. (a) ASC mRNA expression following transfection with control and ASC siRNA. Data represent the mean ± standard error of the mean of three to four replicates. (b) Western blot analysis of ASC protein expression following transfection with control and ASC siRNA. Relative densitometry data as compared with controls are given for each lane. The original gel images of Western blotting are shown in Fig. S7. (c) Photographs of wells on day 5 after siRNA transfection. (d) Viability of cells transfected with control or ASC siRNA. Data represent the mean ± standard error of the mean of three replicates. *p < 0.05, vs. control, Student’s t test.
Figure 5Functional enrichment analysis using Metascape and GSEA. (a) Venn diagram showing overlapping RNAs detected via RNA-seq analysis of downregulated RNAs at 72-h post-transfection of either ASC (1) or (2) siRNA and relative to control siRNA-transfected PANC-1 cells. (b) Functional enrichment results. Heatmap showing the top 20 clusters colored according to the p-value (darker color indicates a lower p-value). (c) Network of the top 20 clusters of enriched terms. Each node indicates an enrichment term colored by cluster ID. Nodes sharing the same cluster are generally located in close proximity. Terms with a kappa similarity ≥ 0.3 are connected. (d) GSEA for the gene signature of KEGG_CELL_CYCLE. NES normalized enrichment score, FDR false discovery rate.
Figure 6ASC silencing reduces CCND1 expression and blocks the cell cycle at the G1 phase. (a) Quantification of three experimental replicates of cell cycle phase distribution. Error bars indicate the standard error of the mean based on three independent experiments. *p < 0.05 vs. control, Student’s t test. (b, c) mRNA levels of CCNDs and CCNEs according to real-time RT-PCR following ASC silencing in PANC-1 and ASPC-1 cells. Data represent the mean ± standard error of the mean of three to four replicates. (d) CCND1 expression following ASC silencing according to western blot. Relative densitometry data as compared with controls are given for each lane. The original gel images of Western blotting are shown in Fig. S8.
Figure 7ASC silencing does not induce apoptosis-related changes in PDAC cells. (a) IHC staining of PANC-1 cells to detect apoptosis induction and TUNEL staining at 72-h post-transfection with control and ASC siRNA. Scale bar: 500 µm. (b) Quantitation of apoptotic cells based on TUNEL staining at 72-h post-transfection with control and ASC siRNA. Data represent the mean ± standard error of the mean of five areas. (c) Changes in the expression of apoptosis-related proteins at 72-h post-transfection with control and ASC (2) siRNA in PANC-1 cells and analyzed using human apoptosis proteome profiler arrays. Boxes show the localization of procaspase-3 and cleaved caspase-3 on the membrane. The cytokine array coordinates are as follows: positive ctrl (A1, A2); positive ctrl (A23, A24); Bad (B1, B2); Bax (B3, B4); Bcl-2 (B5, B6); Bcl-x (B7, B8); procaspase-3 (B9, B10); cleaved caspase-3 (B11, B12); catalase (B13, B14); cIAP-1 (B15, B16); cIAP-2 (B17, B18); claspin (B19, B20); clusterin (B21, B22); cytochrome c (B23, B24); TRAIL R1/DR4 (C1, C2); TRAIL R2/DR5 (C3, C4); FADD (C5, C6); Fas/TNFRSF6/CD95 (C7, C8); HIF-1α (C9, C10); HO-1/HMOX/HSP32 (C11, C12); HO-2/HMOX2 (C13, C14); HSP27 (C15, C16); HSP60 (C17, C18); HSP70 (C19, C20); HTRA2/0mi (C21, C22); livin (C23, C24); PON2 (D1, D2); p21/IP1/CDKN1A (D3, D4); p27/Kip (C5, D6); phospho-p53 (S15) (D7, D8); phospho-p53 (S46) (D9, D10); phospho-p53 (S392) (D11, D12); phospho-Rad17 (S635) (D13, D14); SMAD/Diablo (D15, D16); survivin (D17, D18); TNF RI/TNFRSF1A (D19, D20); XIAP (D21, D22); negative ctrl (D23, D24); and positive ctrl (E1, E2). (d) Quantitative analysis of procaspase-3 and cleaved caspase-3. Data represent the average of two spots.