| Literature DB >> 36059653 |
Ying Chen1, Hai Qin2, Lufeng Zheng1.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women and has a high incidence rate and mortality. Abnormal regulation of gene expression plays an important role in breast cancer occurrence and development. RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are one kind of the key regulators for gene expression. By interacting with RNA, RBPs are widely involved in RNA cutting, transport, editing, intracellular localization, and translation regulation. RBPs are important during breast cancer occurrence and progression by engaging in many aspects, like proliferation, migration, invasion, and stemness. Therefore, comprehensively understanding the role of RBPs in breast cancer progression can facilitate early diagnosis, timely treatment, and long-term survival and quality of life of breast cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: 3’UTR; RNA-binding proteins; breast cancer; mRNA; research progress
Year: 2022 PMID: 36059653 PMCID: PMC9433872 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.974523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1RBP is related to the occurrence and progression of breast cancer.
Summary of the cellular functions of RBPs in breast cancer.
| RBP | Expression in breast cancer | Functions | Pathways/targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RBM38 | Downregulation | Inhibits proliferation, invasion, migration, EMT; regulates the cell cycle | p53, c-Myc, PTEN, ZO-1, STARD13-correlated ceRNA network | ( |
| PCBP2 | Upregulation | Promotes migration, proliferation, invasion, stemness, EMT and cholesterol synthesis; inhibits apoptosis | UFD1, NT5E, lnc030, SQLE, PI3K/Akt signaling pathways | ( |
| QKI | Downregulation | Inhibits self-renewal, EMT, cell contact, proliferation, migration, invasion; regulates the cell cycle and apoptosis | RASA1, MAPK signaling pathways, FOXO1, lncRNA ST8SIA6-AS1 | ( |
| HuR | Upregulation | Promotes invasion, proliferation, migration, angiogenesis; regulates the cell cycle; inhibits apoptosis | Snail, MMP-9, uPAR, FOXQ1, VEGFA, CDK3, lncRNA AGAP2-AS1, MTA1, TNF-α | ( |
| LIN28 | Upregulation | Promotes proliferation, migration, invasion, stemness; regulates aerobic glycolysis, Warburg effect and pH | let-7, CAIX, miR-638, CREB1, VASP, MSI2, YAP1, Hippo signaling pathways | ( |
| SAM68 | Upregulation | Promotes survival, proliferation, migration and invasion; regulates the cell cycle | CBP/β-catenin, Insulin and leptin signaling pathway, MAPK/PI3K signaling pathways, p21 and p27, FOXO, Akt/GSK-3β signal transduction, Rad51, PARP | ( |
| MSI | Upregulation | Promotes stemness, chemoresistance and proliferation; regulates the cell cycle; inhibits apoptosis and invasion | p21Cip1, TAC1, EMT, ERK1/2, TP53INP1, ESR1, Notch | ( |
Figure 2The regulatory mechanism of RBM38 in breast cancer. RBM38 can directly bind 3’UTR of ZO-1 and PTEN, positively regulate their transcripts, and inhibit cell migration and invasion. RBM38 inhibits the migration and invasion of breast cancer cells by inducing cell cycle arrest and inhibiting mutant p53-induced EMT. RBM38 can act as a tumor suppressor by forming a regulatory loop with related genes, and inhibit c-Myc expression by directly targeting 3’UTR of c-Myc mRNA. In turn, c-Myc inhibits RBM38 expression by directly binding to the E-box motif in the RBM38 promoter region. RBM38 can promote ceRNA interactions among STARD13, CDH5, HOXD10 and HOXD1 (STARD13-correlated ceRNA network), by promoting the expression of these four genes, inhibit breast cancer cell metastasis. Arrows indicate activation and blunted lines indicate inhibition.
RBP and clinical relevance.
| RBP | Clinical Relevance | References |
|---|---|---|
| RBM38 | The high expression of RBM38 is positively correlated with the low rate of distant metastasis and good prognosis in patients with breast cancer. | ( |
| HuR | Patients with high levels of cytoplasmic HuR have a higher risk of metastasis. | ( |
| LIN28 | The expression of LIN28 is related to the stage and subtype of advanced disease in patients with breast cancer, and the expression of LIN28 may be an independent prognostic factor. | ( |
| MSI | MSI-1 is a negative prognostic marker for disease-free and distant metastasis free survival of breast cancer, which has a negative impact on the overall survival rate. Low expression of MSI-2 is associated with poor prognosis in patients with breast cancer. | ( |
Figure 3The regulatory mechanism of PCBP2 in breast cancer. PCBP2 can directly bind 3’UTR of UFD1 and NT5E, positively regulate their transcripts,and promote tumor growth and metastasis. Lnc030 cooperates with PCBP2 to stabilize SQLE mRNA, increase cholesterol synthesis, activate PI3K/Akt signal transduction, and regulate cholesterol synthesis and stemness properties of BCSCs. Arrows indicate activation and blunted lines indicate inhibition.
Figure 4The regulatory mechanism of QKI in breast cancer. QKI can directly combine with RASA1 mRNA to enhance its expression and reduce the phosphorylation of MAPK signaling pathway, thus inhibiting the activation of MAPK pathway and proliferation of breast cancer cells. QKI can directly bind to 3’UTR of FoxO1, reduce its mRNA stability, and regulate cell cycle and apoptosis. LncRNA TPT1-AS1 can act as a ceRNA of miR-330-3p to up regulate QKI expression, thus inhibiting the proliferation, migration, and invasion of breast cancer cells. Arrows indicate activation and blunted lines indicate inhibition.
Figure 5The regulatory mechanism of HuR in breast cancer. HuR interacts with 3’UTR of Snail, MMP-9 and uPAR, regulates EMT and EMC, and promotes invasion and metastasis. HuR interacts with FOXQ1 mRNA to inhibit the invasion of breast cancer cells. HuR can form a complex with RRM1/2–VEGFA mRNA to promote tumor growth and angiogenesis. Hur can bind to lncRNA AGAP2-AS1 to stabilize AGAP2-AS1 expression. AGAP2-AS1-HuR complex up regulates H3K27ac level in MTA1 promoter region to increase MTA1 promoter activity and MTA1 expression, thus enhancing resistance to apoptosis. Arrows indicate activation and blunted lines indicate inhibition.
Figure 6The regulatory mechanism of LIN28 in breast cancer. LIN28 can block the production of let-7 miRNA and disinhibit the target genes of let-7 miRNA (RAS, MYC and HMGA2), thus promoting the migration of breast cancer cells. Inhibition of CAIX will affect let-7/LIN28 axis and related metabolic pathways. CREB1 binds to the promoter of LIN28, activates LIN28/miR-638/VASP pathway, and promotes the proliferation and migration of breast cancer cells. LIN28 can recruit MSI2, directly induce the mRNA decay of upstream kinase of YAP1, and negatively regulate Hippo pathway, leading to the activation of YAP1, thus enhancing CSC like characteristics, tumorigenesis and metastasis in TNBC cells. Arrows indicate activation and blunted lines indicate inhibition.
Figure 7The regulatory mechanism of SAM68 in breast cancer. Insulin and leptin stimulation can promote SAM68 tyrosine phosphorylation, activate MAPK and PI3K signaling pathways in cancer, and promote cell proliferation and survival. SAM68 can form CBP-SAM68 complex in CSC, reduces CSC self-renewal and induces differentiation. Knockdown of endogenous SAM68 can inhibit cell proliferation and tumorigenicity of breast cancer cells by blocking G1 phase transition to S phase.
Figure 8The regulatory mechanism of MSI in breast cancer. Silencing MSI-1 results in down-regulation of stem cell gene expression and up-regulation of cell cycle and apoptosis regulator p21. MSI1 competes with miR130a and -206 for interaction with TAC1 mRNA to stabilize and increase its translation and increase tumor growth. MSI-1 can promote Notch signal by binding to the mRNA of the negative regulator of Notch signal, numb, and can also down regulate 26S proteasome by binding to the mRNA of NF-YA to prevent the degradation of Notch ICD. MSI2 can inhibit EMT progression in breast cancer, and MSI2a expression inhibits TNBC invasion by stabilizing TP53INP1 mRNA and inhibiting ERK1/2 activity. MSI2 directly regulates ESR1 and affects the growth of breast cancer cells.