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METTL3 preferentially enhances non-m 6 A translation of epigenetic factors and promotes tumourigenesis.

Xueju WeiYue HuoJingnan PiYufeng GaoShuan RaoManman HeQinglv WeiPeng SongYiying ChenDongxu LuWei SongJunbo LiangLingjie XuHaixia WangGuolin HongYuehong GuoYanmin SiJiayue XuXiaoshuang WangYanni MaShuyang YuDongling ZouJing JinFang WangJia Yu
Published in: Nature cell biology (2022)
METTL3 encodes the predominant catalytic enzyme to promote m 6 A methylation in nucleus. Recently, accumulating evidence has shown the expression of METTL3 in cytoplasm, but its function is not fully understood. Here we demonstrated an m 6 A-independent mechanism for METTL3 to promote tumour progression. In gastric cancer, METTL3 could not only facilitate cancer progression via m 6 A modification, but also bind to numerous non-m 6 A-modified mRNAs, suggesting an unexpected role of METTL3. Mechanistically, cytoplasm-anchored METTL3 interacted with PABPC1 to stabilize its association with cap-binding complex eIF4F, which preferentially promoted the translation of epigenetic factors without m 6 A modification. Clinical investigation showed that cytoplasmic distributed METTL3 was highly correlated with gastric cancer progression, and this finding could be expanded to prostate cancer. Therefore, the cytoplasmic METTL3 enhances the translation of epigenetic mRNAs, thus serving as an oncogenic driver in cancer progression, and METTL3 subcellular distribution can assist diagnosis and predict prognosis for patients with cancer.
Keyphrases
  • prostate cancer
  • dna methylation
  • poor prognosis
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • genome wide
  • young adults
  • radical prostatectomy
  • long non coding rna
  • childhood cancer