| Literature DB >> 35449073 |
Yan Dong1, Liyan Xue2, Yan Zhang1,3, Caiyun Liu4, Yanguang Zhang1,3, Na Jiang1,3, Xiaoyan Ma1,3, Fangyu Chen1,3, Lingxia Li1, Liyuan Yu1,3, Xuefeng Liu5, Shujuan Shao6, Shufang Guan1, Jian Zhang1, Qingchun Xiao1, Hui Li1, Ailing Dong1, Lijie Huang7, Chenyang Shi1, Yan Wang3, Ming Fu7, Ning Lv8, Qimin Zhan9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is one of the common cancers worldwide. The lack of specific biomarkers and therapeutic targets leads to delayed diagnosis and hence the poor prognosis of OSCC patients. Thus, it is urgent to identify effective biomarkers and therapeutic targets for OSCC.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative splicing; Lsm12; Novel biomarker; OSCC; USO1 exon 15
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35449073 PMCID: PMC9027881 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02355-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Lsm12 expression is upregulated in the model of OSCC tumorigenesis. a The position of Lsm12 gene on the chromosome and its transcription and translation products. Lsm12 belongs to Sm family which is involved in RNA splicing. b Histopathological images of normal epithelium, hyperplasia, mild/moderate dysplasia, papilloma and squamous cell carcinoma in the animal model of OSCC tumorigenesis. The papilloma is accompanied by severe dysplasia. Bar, 100 μm. c The clustergram of mRNA microarray showed genome-wide expression profiles in four squamous cell carcinoma tissues (purple), four papilloma tissues (dark blue), four dysplasia tissues (light green), four hyperplasia tissues (yellow) and two normal tissues (red). d Real time PCR results validated that Lsm12 expression at mRNA level was significantly upregulated in OSCC tissues compared with that in papilloma tissues (P < 0.01), which were consistent with the results of mRNA microarray data analysis
Clinical characteristics of the 101 cases of OSCC patients
| Variable | Cases, |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 80 (79.2%) |
| Female | 21 (20.8%) |
| Age | |
| < 60 | 73 (72.3%) |
| > =60 | 28 (27.7%) |
| Smoking | |
| Yes | 66 (65.3%) |
| No | 35 (34.7%) |
| Differentiation | |
| Well | 52 (51.5%) |
| Moderate | 32 (31.7%) |
| Poor | 16 (15.8%) |
| Undifferentiated | 1 (1%) |
Fig. 2Lsm12 expression is upregulated in OSCC clinical tissues. a Statistics analysis of Lsm12 immunohistochemistry scores for the paired samples from 101 OSCC cases. b Lsm12 staining was positive in 100% of OSCC tissues and was negative in 91% of the paired normal tissues. Statistics analysis revealed that Lsm12 expression was upregulated significantly in OSCC tissues. c IHC staining and HE histopathology images of three representative cases showed Lsm12 expression in OSCC and the paired adjacent normal tissues. Lsm12 expression in the upper spinous and superficial layers was all negative in the paired normal tissues. Bar, 100 μm
Fig. 3Lsm12 expression is upregulated in many types of malignant tumors. GEPIA database showed that Lsm12 expression was significantly upregulated (fold change ≥1.5) in many types of malignant tumor samples (red box) compared with the paired normal tissues (grey box). Each dot represents expression of one sample. * indicates P < 0.05
Fig. 4Lsm12 promotes the cell proliferation, mobility and tumorigenicity in vivo. a Cell growth curve analysis showed that the growth rate of OSCC cells was significantly increased when Lsm12 was overexpressed and decreased upon Lsm12 knockdown. b, c Colony formation assay revealed that colony formation ability of OSCC cells was significantly increased when Lsm12 was overexpressed and decreased upon Lsm12 knockdown. d-f Cell cycle analysis showed that Lsm12 overexpression increased the proportions of S phase and G2/M phase but Lsm12 knockdown decreased the proportion of S phase significantly in OSCC cells. g-i Transwell assay showed the effect of Lsm12 on the migration and invasion abilities of OSCC cells. j The results of in vivo tumorigenicity assay showed that no tumor formation was observed in five mice of Lsm12 knockdown group and the tumors were formed in five mice of the control group. Histopathological examination of the excised tumors showed squamous cell carcinoma. Bar, 50 μm. *, ** and *** indicate P < 0.05, P < 0.01 and P < 0.001, respectively
Fig. 5Lsm12 regulates the expression and alternative splicing of genes. a Volcano plot showed 1032 DEGs including 592 upregulated and 440 downregulated genes induced by Lsm12 knockdown. The red dots represent the upregulated genes and the green dots represent the downregulated genes (≥2-fold, P < 0.05). b The top 20 significantly enriched DO categories include some oral and respiratory diseases. c The top 30 enriched GO items such as positive regulation of cell proliferation, positive regulation of angiogenesis, and immune response. d The enriched 17 pathways such as transcriptional misregulation in cancer. e Lsm12 knockdown induced alternative splicing events including SE, RI, A5SS and A3SS
Fig. 6Lsm12 regulates alternative splicing of USO1. a USO1 gene has two transcript variants according to UCSC database. Alternative splicing of USO1 exon 15 is shown. b Whole transcriptome sequencing analysis revealed that Lsm12 knockdown induced USO1 exon 15 skipping. c-f The results of PCR assay and sequencing showed that Lsm12 regulated the alternative splicing of USO1 exon 15 in SCC-25 cells and modulated the expression level of USO1 in CAL 27 cells. Red arrows indicate exon 15 skipping. g, h PCR assay and sequencing showed that there were two USO1 transcript variants with or without exon 15 in SCC-25 cells, but only one USO1 transcript variant with exon 15 was observed in CAL 27 cells. USO1 exon 5 was found constitutively to be skipped in both SCC-25 and CAL 27 cells. Blue arrows indicate Exon 5 skipping
Fig. 7USO1 containing exon 15 promotes cell proliferation, mobility and tumorigenicity in vivo. a The results of PCR assay and sequencing showed that the stable cell lines overexpressing USO1 with or without exon 15 were constructed in CAL 27 cells. b-e Overexpression of USO1 containing exon 15 significantly promoted the cell proliferation, increased the proportion of G2/M phase, and enhanced the colony formation, cell migration and invasion abilities of OSCC cells. f 3.5 × 106 USO1-FL or USO1-DE cells were subcutaneously injected into each of six nude mice. Excised tumors were shown. Tumor volume and weight were increased remarkably in the group of USO1 with exon 15, compared with those in the group of USO1 without exon 15. Histopathological examination of the tumor specimens from these two groups showed squamous cell carcinoma. Bar, 50 μm