SFPQ promotes an oncogenic transcriptomic state in melanoma.
O BiC A AneneJeremie NsengimanaM SheltonW RobertsJ Newton-BishopJames R BoynePublished in: Oncogene (2021)
The multifunctional protein, splicing factor, proline- and glutamine-rich (SFPQ) has been implicated in numerous cancers often due to interaction with coding and non-coding RNAs, however, its role in melanoma remains unclear. We report that knockdown of SFPQ expression in melanoma cells decelerates several cancer-associated cell phenotypes, including cell growth, migration, epithelial to mesenchymal transition, apoptosis, and glycolysis. RIP-seq analysis revealed that the SFPQ-RNA interactome is reprogrammed in melanoma cells and specifically enriched with key melanoma-associated coding and long non-coding transcripts, including SOX10, AMIGO2 and LINC00511 and in most cases SFPQ is required for the efficient expression of these genes. Functional analysis of two SFPQ-enriched lncRNA, LINC00511 and LINC01234, demonstrated that these genes independently contribute to the melanoma phenotype and a more detailed analysis of LINC00511 indicated that this occurs in part via modulation of the miR-625-5p/PKM2 axis. Importantly, analysis of a large clinical cohort revealed that elevated expression of SFPQ in primary melanoma tumours may have utility as a prognostic biomarker. Together, these data suggest that SFPQ is an important driver of melanoma, likely due to SFPQ-RNA interactions promoting the expression of numerous oncogenic transcripts.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- long non coding rna
- single cell
- long noncoding rna
- skin cancer
- cell proliferation
- binding protein
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- rna seq
- stem cells
- drug delivery
- dna methylation
- oxidative stress
- machine learning
- young adults
- signaling pathway
- artificial intelligence
- protein protein
- bone marrow
- pi k akt
- nucleic acid