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Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer

BACKGROUND: As the most abundant epigenetic modification on mRNAs and long non‐coding RNAs, N6‐methyladenosine (m6A) modification extensively exists in mammalian cells. Controlled by writers (methyltransferases), readers (signal transducers), and erasers (demethylases), m6A influences mRNA structure...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Cheng, Zhang, Mengqi, Ge, Sai, Huang, Wenwen, Lin, Xiaoting, Gao, Jing, Gong, Jifang, Shen, Lin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6712480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31243897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2360
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author Zhang, Cheng
Zhang, Mengqi
Ge, Sai
Huang, Wenwen
Lin, Xiaoting
Gao, Jing
Gong, Jifang
Shen, Lin
author_facet Zhang, Cheng
Zhang, Mengqi
Ge, Sai
Huang, Wenwen
Lin, Xiaoting
Gao, Jing
Gong, Jifang
Shen, Lin
author_sort Zhang, Cheng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: As the most abundant epigenetic modification on mRNAs and long non‐coding RNAs, N6‐methyladenosine (m6A) modification extensively exists in mammalian cells. Controlled by writers (methyltransferases), readers (signal transducers), and erasers (demethylases), m6A influences mRNA structure, maturation, and stability, thus negatively regulating protein expression in a post‐translational manner. Nevertheless, current understanding of m6A's roles in tumorigenesis, especially in gastric cancer (GC) remains to be unveiled. In this study, we assessed m6A's clinicopathological relevance to GC and explored the underlying mechanisms. METHODS: By referring to a proteomics‐based GC cohort we previously generated and the TCGA‐GC cohort, we merged expressions of canonical m6A writers (METTL3/METTL14), readers (YTHDF1/YTHDF2/YTHDF3), and erasers (ALKBH5/FTO), respectively, as W, R, and E signatures to represent m6A modification. We stratified patients according to these signatures to decipher m6A's associations with crucial mutations, prognosis, and clinical indexes. m6A's biological functions in GC were predicted by gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) and validated by in vitro experiments. RESULTS: We discovered that W and R were potential tumor suppressive signatures, while E was a potential oncogenic signature in GC. According to W/R/E stratifications, patients with low m6A‐indications were accompanied with higher mutations of specific genes (CDH1, AR, GLI3, SETBP1, RHOA, MUC6, and TP53) and also demonstrated adverse clinical outcomes. GSEA suggested that reduced m6A was correlated with oncogenic signaling and phenotypes. Through in vitro experiments, we proved that m6A suppression (represented by METTL14 knockdown) promoted GC cell proliferation and invasiveness through activating Wnt and PI3K‐Akt signaling, while m6A elevation (represented by FTO knockdown) reversed these phenotypical and molecular changes. m6A may also be involved in interferon signaling and immune responses of GC. CONCLUSIONS: Our work demonstrated that low‐m6A signatures predicted adverse clinicopathological features of GC, while the reduction of RNA m6A methylation activated oncogenic Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling and promoted malignant phenotypes of GC cells.
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spelling pubmed-67124802019-09-04 Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer Zhang, Cheng Zhang, Mengqi Ge, Sai Huang, Wenwen Lin, Xiaoting Gao, Jing Gong, Jifang Shen, Lin Cancer Med Cancer Biology BACKGROUND: As the most abundant epigenetic modification on mRNAs and long non‐coding RNAs, N6‐methyladenosine (m6A) modification extensively exists in mammalian cells. Controlled by writers (methyltransferases), readers (signal transducers), and erasers (demethylases), m6A influences mRNA structure, maturation, and stability, thus negatively regulating protein expression in a post‐translational manner. Nevertheless, current understanding of m6A's roles in tumorigenesis, especially in gastric cancer (GC) remains to be unveiled. In this study, we assessed m6A's clinicopathological relevance to GC and explored the underlying mechanisms. METHODS: By referring to a proteomics‐based GC cohort we previously generated and the TCGA‐GC cohort, we merged expressions of canonical m6A writers (METTL3/METTL14), readers (YTHDF1/YTHDF2/YTHDF3), and erasers (ALKBH5/FTO), respectively, as W, R, and E signatures to represent m6A modification. We stratified patients according to these signatures to decipher m6A's associations with crucial mutations, prognosis, and clinical indexes. m6A's biological functions in GC were predicted by gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) and validated by in vitro experiments. RESULTS: We discovered that W and R were potential tumor suppressive signatures, while E was a potential oncogenic signature in GC. According to W/R/E stratifications, patients with low m6A‐indications were accompanied with higher mutations of specific genes (CDH1, AR, GLI3, SETBP1, RHOA, MUC6, and TP53) and also demonstrated adverse clinical outcomes. GSEA suggested that reduced m6A was correlated with oncogenic signaling and phenotypes. Through in vitro experiments, we proved that m6A suppression (represented by METTL14 knockdown) promoted GC cell proliferation and invasiveness through activating Wnt and PI3K‐Akt signaling, while m6A elevation (represented by FTO knockdown) reversed these phenotypical and molecular changes. m6A may also be involved in interferon signaling and immune responses of GC. CONCLUSIONS: Our work demonstrated that low‐m6A signatures predicted adverse clinicopathological features of GC, while the reduction of RNA m6A methylation activated oncogenic Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling and promoted malignant phenotypes of GC cells. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6712480/ /pubmed/31243897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2360 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Cancer Biology
Zhang, Cheng
Zhang, Mengqi
Ge, Sai
Huang, Wenwen
Lin, Xiaoting
Gao, Jing
Gong, Jifang
Shen, Lin
Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer
title Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer
title_full Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer
title_fullStr Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer
title_full_unstemmed Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer
title_short Reduced m6A modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented Wnt/PI3K‐Akt signaling in gastric cancer
title_sort reduced m6a modification predicts malignant phenotypes and augmented wnt/pi3k‐akt signaling in gastric cancer
topic Cancer Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6712480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31243897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2360
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