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MZT2A promotes NSCLC viability and invasion by increasing Akt phosphorylation via the MOZART2 domain.

Huanxi WangXizi JiangYu ChengHongjiu RenYujiao HuYao ZhangHongbo SuZifang ZouQiongzi WangZongang LiuJiameng ZhangXueshan Qiu
Published in: Cancer science (2021)
Mitotic spindle organizing protein 2A (MZT2A) is localized at the centrosome and regulates microtubule nucleation activity in cells. This study assessed the role of MZT2A in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Differential MZT2A expression was bioinformatically assessed using TCGA database, the GEPIA database, and Kaplan-Meier survival data to determine the association between MZT2A expression and NSCLC prognosis. Furthermore, NSCLC tissue specimens were evaluated by immunohistochemistry. MZT2A was overexpressed or knocked down in NSCLC cells using cDNA and siRNA, respectively. The cells were subjected to various assays and treated with the selective Akt inhibitor LY294002 or co-transfected with galectin-3-binding protein (LGALS3BP) siRNA. MZT2A mRNA and protein levels were upregulated in NSCLC lesions and MTZ2A expression was associated with poor NSCLC prognosis. MZT2A protein was also highly expressed in NSCLC cells compared with the expression in normal bronchial cells. MZT2A expression promoted NSCLC cell viability and invasion, whereas MTZ2A siRNA had the opposite effect on NSCLC cells in vitro. At the protein level, MZT2A induced Akt phosphorylation, promoting NSCLC proliferation and invasion (but the selective Akt inhibitor blocked these effects) through upregulation of LGALS3BP via the MTZ2A MOZART2 domain, whereas LGALS3BP siRNA suppressed MTZ2A activity in NSCLC cells. The limited in vivo experiments confirmed the in vitro data. In conclusion, MZT2A exhibits oncogenic activity by activating LGALS3BP and Akt in NSCLC. Future studies will assess MTZ2A as a biomarker to predict NSCLC prognosis or as a target in the control of NSCLC progression.
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