A tumor suppressive long noncoding RNA, DRAIC, inhibits protein translation and induces autophagy by activating AMPK.
Shekhar SahaYing ZhangBriana WilsonRoger AbounaderAnindya DuttaPublished in: Journal of cell science (2021)
LncRNAs are long RNA transcripts that do not code for proteins and that have been shown to play a major role in cellular processes through diverse mechanisms. DRAIC, a lncRNA which is downregulated in castration-resistant advanced prostate cancer, inhibits the NF-kB pathway by inhibiting the IκB kinase. Decreased DRAIC expression predicted poor patient outcome in gliomas and seven other cancers. We now report that DRAIC suppresses invasion, migration, colony formation and xenograft growth of glioblastoma derived cell lines. DRAIC activates AMPK by downregulating the NF-κB target gene GLUT1, and thus represses mTOR, leading to downstream effects such as decrease in protein translation and increase in autophagy. DRAIC, therefore, has an effect on multiple signal transduction pathways that are important for oncogenesis: the NF-κB pathway and AMPK-mTOR-S6K/ULK1 pathway. The regulation of NF-κB, protein translation and autophagy by the same lncRNA explains the tumor suppressive role of DRAIC in different cancers and reinforces the importance of lncRNAs as emerging regulators of signal transduction pathways.
Keyphrases
- signaling pathway
- long noncoding rna
- pi k akt
- prostate cancer
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- protein kinase
- lps induced
- skeletal muscle
- protein protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- poor prognosis
- long non coding rna
- nuclear factor
- transcription factor
- small molecule
- high grade
- dna methylation
- immune response
- tyrosine kinase
- network analysis
- inflammatory response