Affiliation:
1. Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine
2. The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Metastasis is the leading cause of gastric cancer (GC)-related death. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying GC metastasis are not well understood. In this study, we focus on DRD5P2, a novel long non-coding RNA, in GC metastasis.
Methods: Expression of DRD5P2 in GC is detected by RT-PCR and FISH. The effect of DRD5P2 in GC cells were examined by transwell invasion and migration assays. The pathways underlying DRD5P2/ROCK2 signaling were studied by Western blot, Co-IP, Ch-IP and RIP analysis. Regulatory mechanism between hypoxia and DRD5P2 expression were explored in vitro by Ch-IP and Dual-luciferase reporter assays.
Results: DRD5P2 expression is down-regulated in advanced human GC and is associated with poor clinical outcomes. Gain- and loss- of function studies show that DRD5P2 inhibits GC cell migration, invasion, and EMT in vitro, as well as peritoneal dissemination in vivo. Mechanistic analysis reveals that DRD5P2 binds with ROCK2 and recruits the E3-ubiquitin ligase KAP1 to mediate ROCK2 degradation, thus suppressing the Ezrin/HRAS/ERK/CREB pathway and ultimately attenuating Snail-mediated EMT and GC metastasis. Furthermore, DRD5P2 transcription is inhibited by hypoxia in a HIF-1α/ZNF263-dependent manner in GC cells.
Conclusions: DRD5P2 acts as a tumor suppressor in GC metastasis by suppressing ROCK2/ERK/Snail signaling, and DRD5P2 is transcriptionally suppressed under hypoxia via HIF-1α/ZNF263 axis.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC