EZH2-DNMT1-mediated epigenetic silencing of miR-142-3p promotes metastasis through targeting ZEB2 in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Yingqin LiQingmei HeXin WenXiaohong HongXiaojing YangXinran TangPan-Pan ZhangYuan LeiYing SunJian ZhangYaqin WangJun MaNa LiuPublished in: Cell death and differentiation (2018)
Human nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) has the highest metastatic rate in head and neck. However, the mechanisms underlying NPC metastasis remain unclear. Here using propensity-score-matched miRNA microarray analysis, miR-142-3p is identified to be the most correlated with distant-metastasis-free survival and downregulated in paraffin-embedded NPC with distant metastasis, which is validated in both internal cohort and external GEO dataset from Canada. miR-142 locus hypermethylation was observed and found to be associated with miR-142-3p downregulation in metastatic NPC. Furthermore, miR-142-3p was epigenetically silenced by EZH2-recruited DNMT1 and suppressed NPC cell metastasis and EMT. Intersecting PCR array gene profiling with bioinformatic prediction, we identify ZEB2 as a direct and functional target of miR-142-3p in NPC. Reversal of miR-142-3p silencing efficiently suppresses NPC cell invasion and metastasis. Moreover, epigenetic miR-142 hypermethylation is correlated with unfavorable prognosis in both training and validation cohorts. This study identifies miR-142-3p as a key suppressive regulator in NPC metastasis and reveals a DNMT1-mediated epigenetic mechanism for miR-142-3p silencing, providing a potential prognostic marker and therapeutic target to combat NPC metastasis.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- long non coding rna
- long noncoding rna
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- genome wide
- lymph node
- transcription factor
- risk assessment
- signaling pathway
- climate change
- high resolution
- human health
- genome wide association study