Widespread Alternative Splicing Changes in Metastatic Breast Cancer Cells.
Jagyeong OhDavide PradellaChangwei ShaoHairi LiNamjeong ChoiJiyeon HaSonia RuggieroXiang-Dong FuXuexiu ZhengClaudia GhignaHaihong ShenPublished in: Cells (2021)
Aberrant alternative splicing (AS) is a hallmark of cancer and a potential target for novel anti-cancer therapeutics. Breast cancer-associated AS events are known to be linked to disease progression, metastasis, and survival of breast cancer patients. To identify altered AS programs occurring in metastatic breast cancer, we perform a global analysis of AS events by using RNA-mediated oligonucleotide annealing, selection, and ligation coupled with next-generation sequencing (RASL-seq). We demonstrate that, relative to low-metastatic, high-metastatic breast cancer cells show different AS choices in genes related to cancer progression. Supporting a global reshape of cancer-related splicing profiles in metastatic breast cancer we found an enrichment of RNA-binding motifs recognized by several splicing regulators, which have aberrant expression levels or activity during breast cancer progression, including SRSF1. Among SRSF1-regulated targets we found DCUN1D5, a gene for which skipping of exon 4 in its pre-mRNA introduces a premature termination codon (PTC), thus generating an unstable transcript degraded by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). Significantly, distinct breast cancer subtypes show different DCUN1D5 isoform ratios with metastatic breast cancer expressing the highest level of the NMD-insensitive DCUN1D5 mRNA, thus showing high DCUN1D5 expression levels, which are ultimately associated with poor overall and relapse-free survival in breast cancer patients. Collectively, our results reveal global AS features of metastatic breast tumors, which open new possibilities for the treatment of these aggressive tumor types.
Keyphrases
- metastatic breast cancer
- free survival
- binding protein
- genome wide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- papillary thyroid
- poor prognosis
- small cell lung cancer
- copy number
- breast cancer cells
- squamous cell
- transcription factor
- childhood cancer
- induced apoptosis
- rna seq
- single cell
- lymph node metastasis
- genome wide identification
- cell cycle arrest
- young adults
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- human health