Oncogenic Properties of the Antisense lncRNA COMET in BRAF- and RET-Driven Papillary Thyroid Carcinomas.
Roberta EspositoDaniela EspositoPierlorenzo PallanteAlfredo FuscoAlfredo CiccodicolaValerio CostaPublished in: Cancer research (2019)
RET rearrangements as well as BRAF and RAS mutations drive differential pathway activation in papillary thyroid carcinomas, leading to different tumor phenotypes and prognoses. Although The Cancer Genome Atlas Consortium has identified tumor subgroups based on protein-coding gene signatures, neither expression of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNA) nor their correlation with specific tumor-driving mutations and rearrangements have been systematically assessed. Here, we reanalyzed our RNA-sequencing data using a de novo discovery approach to identify lncRNAs and define tumor subtype-specific signatures of annotated lncRNAs. Among them, we identified COMET (Correlated-to-MET), a natural antisense transcript that was highly expressed in carcinomas harboring BRAF V600E mutation or RET gene rearrangements (i.e., BRAF-like tumors) and induced the downstream MAPK pathway. In papillary thyroid carcinomas, COMET was part of a coexpression network including different oncogenes belonging to the MAPK pathway, and its expression highly correlated with MET expression. Depletion of COMET resulted in reduced expression of genes within this network, including the MET oncogene. COMET repression inhibited viability and proliferation of tumor cells harboring BRAF V600E somatic mutation or RET oncogene rearrangement and dramatically reduced motility and invasiveness of tumor cells. Moreover, silencing COMET markedly increased sensitivity to vemurafenib, a common inhibitor of mutated B-raf. Collectively, our results suggest COMET as a new target to improve drug-based cancer therapies, especially in BRAF-mutated and MET-addicted papillary thyroid carcinomas. SIGNIFICANCE: These results highlight the oncogenic role of lncRNA COMET in thyroid and indicate it as a potential new target to overcome vemurafenib resistance in BRAF-mutated and MET-addicted carcinomas.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- wild type
- lymph node metastasis
- poor prognosis
- metastatic colorectal cancer
- high grade
- genome wide
- tyrosine kinase
- long non coding rna
- genome wide identification
- signaling pathway
- binding protein
- squamous cell carcinoma
- transcription factor
- single cell
- copy number
- oxidative stress
- emergency department
- small molecule
- pi k akt
- machine learning
- high throughput
- cell proliferation
- escherichia coli
- climate change
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- diabetic rats
- amino acid
- bioinformatics analysis
- deep learning
- young adults