N6-methyladenosine mRNA methylation of PIK3CB regulates AKT signalling to promote PTEN-deficient pancreatic cancer progression

Author:

Tian Jianbo,Zhu Ying,Rao Meilin,Cai Yimin,Lu Zequn,Zou Danyi,Peng Xiating,Ying Pingting,Zhang Ming,Niu Siyuan,Li Yue,Zhong Rong,Chang JiangORCID,Miao XiaopingORCID

Abstract

ObjectivePancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the most lethal cancers worldwide. Thus far, most drugs have failed to significantly improve patient survival. N6-methyladenosine (m6A) plays an important role in the progression of PDAC, but its aberrant regulation driven by germline variants in human diseases remains unclear.DesignWe first performed an exome-wide association analysis in 518 PDAC patients with overall survival and replicated in an independent population containing 552 PDAC patients. Then, a series of biochemical experiments in vitro and in vivo were conducted to investigate potential mechanisms of the candidate variant and its target gene PIK3CB underlying the PDAC progression. Moreover, the PIK3CB-selective inhibitor KIN-193 was used to block PDAC tumour growth.ResultsWe identified a missense variant rs142933486 in PIK3CB that is significantly associated with the overall survival of PDAC by reducing the PIK3CB m6A level, which facilitated its mRNA and protein expression levels mediated by the m6A ‘writer’ complex (METTL13/METTL14/WTAP) and the m6A ‘reader’ YTHDF2. The upregulation of PIK3CB is widely found in PDAC tumour tissues and significantly correlated with the poor prognosis of PDAC, especially in PTEN-deficient patients. We further demonstrated that PIK3CB overexpression substantially enhanced the proliferation and migration abilities of PTEN-deficient PDAC cells and activated AKT signalling pathway. Remarkably, KIN-193, a PIK3CB-selective inhibitor, is shown to serve as an effective anticancer agent for blocking PTEN-deficient PDAC.ConclusionsThese findings demonstrate aberrant m6A homoeostasis as an oncogenic mechanism in PDAC and highlight the potential of PIK3CB as a therapeutic target for this disease.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of China

National High-Tech Research and Development Program of China

Program for HUST Academic Frontier Youth Team

National Program for Support of Top-notch Young Professionals and the Young Elite Scientist Sponsorship Program

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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