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Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis

AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 are among the cancer driver candidate genes previously identified via dog-human comparison, and may function in epithelial cell polarity as indicated by bioinformatics analysis. To better understand their cellular functions and roles in cancer, we knocked down each gene in MD...

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Autores principales: Li, Yaping, Xu, Jianing, Xiong, Huan, Ma, Zhongyao, Wang, Zhenghe, Kipreos, Edward T., Dalton, Stephen, Zhao, Shaying
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25621300
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author Li, Yaping
Xu, Jianing
Xiong, Huan
Ma, Zhongyao
Wang, Zhenghe
Kipreos, Edward T.
Dalton, Stephen
Zhao, Shaying
author_facet Li, Yaping
Xu, Jianing
Xiong, Huan
Ma, Zhongyao
Wang, Zhenghe
Kipreos, Edward T.
Dalton, Stephen
Zhao, Shaying
author_sort Li, Yaping
collection PubMed
description AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 are among the cancer driver candidate genes previously identified via dog-human comparison, and may function in epithelial cell polarity as indicated by bioinformatics analysis. To better understand their cellular functions and roles in cancer, we knocked down each gene in MDCKII cells through shRNA and performed three-dimensional culture. Compared to the control, the knockdown clones developed significantly more abnormal cysts, e.g., cysts with the lumen harboring dead and/or live cells, or cysts having multiple lumens. Further analysis revealed that abnormalities initiated at the first cell division and persisted throughout the entire cystogenesis process. For NUPL1-knockdown cells, abnormal cytogenesis largely arose from faulty cell divisions, notably monopolar spindles or spindles with poorly separated poles. For AVL9- or DENND5A-knockdown cells, abnormalities originated from both aberrant intracellular trafficking and defective mitosis. Moreover, while all knockdown clones displayed an accelerated rate of both cell proliferation and death, only AVL9- and DENND5A-knockdowns, but not NUPL1-knockdown, promoted cell migration. These observations indicate that NUPL1 contributes to bipolar spindle formation, whereas AVL9 and DENND5A participate in both intracellular trafficking and cell cycle progression. Our study shed lights on these genes' normal cellular functions and on how their alteration contributes to carcinogenesis.
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spelling pubmed-43038932015-01-23 Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis Li, Yaping Xu, Jianing Xiong, Huan Ma, Zhongyao Wang, Zhenghe Kipreos, Edward T. Dalton, Stephen Zhao, Shaying Oncoscience Research Paper AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 are among the cancer driver candidate genes previously identified via dog-human comparison, and may function in epithelial cell polarity as indicated by bioinformatics analysis. To better understand their cellular functions and roles in cancer, we knocked down each gene in MDCKII cells through shRNA and performed three-dimensional culture. Compared to the control, the knockdown clones developed significantly more abnormal cysts, e.g., cysts with the lumen harboring dead and/or live cells, or cysts having multiple lumens. Further analysis revealed that abnormalities initiated at the first cell division and persisted throughout the entire cystogenesis process. For NUPL1-knockdown cells, abnormal cytogenesis largely arose from faulty cell divisions, notably monopolar spindles or spindles with poorly separated poles. For AVL9- or DENND5A-knockdown cells, abnormalities originated from both aberrant intracellular trafficking and defective mitosis. Moreover, while all knockdown clones displayed an accelerated rate of both cell proliferation and death, only AVL9- and DENND5A-knockdowns, but not NUPL1-knockdown, promoted cell migration. These observations indicate that NUPL1 contributes to bipolar spindle formation, whereas AVL9 and DENND5A participate in both intracellular trafficking and cell cycle progression. Our study shed lights on these genes' normal cellular functions and on how their alteration contributes to carcinogenesis. Impact Journals LLC 2014-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4303893/ /pubmed/25621300 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Li et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Li, Yaping
Xu, Jianing
Xiong, Huan
Ma, Zhongyao
Wang, Zhenghe
Kipreos, Edward T.
Dalton, Stephen
Zhao, Shaying
Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis
title Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis
title_full Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis
title_fullStr Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis
title_short Cancer driver candidate genes AVL9, DENND5A and NUPL1 contribute to MDCK cystogenesis
title_sort cancer driver candidate genes avl9, dennd5a and nupl1 contribute to mdck cystogenesis
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25621300
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