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Alternative splicing of the cyclin D1 proto-oncogene is regulated by the RNA-binding protein Sam68

TitoloAlternative splicing of the cyclin D1 proto-oncogene is regulated by the RNA-binding protein Sam68
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2010
AutoriParonetto, M.P., Cappellari M., Busà R., Pedrotti S., Vitali Roberta, Comstock C., Hyslop T., Knudsen K.E., and Sette C.
RivistaCancer Research
Volume70
Paginazione229-239
ISSN00085472
Parole chiaveallele, alternative RNA splicing, article, binding affinity, binding competition, cancer cell, cell antigen, cell strain HEK293, cell strain LNCaP, chromatin immunoprecipitation, controlled study, cyclin D1, cyclin d1a, cyclin d1b, gene overexpression, human, human cell, human tissue, intron, male, messenger RNA, priority journal, prostate cancer, prostate carcinoma, protein expression, protein phosphorylation, protein processing, protein protein interaction, protein Sam68, proto oncogene, regulatory mechanism, reporter gene, RNA binding protein, RNA Interference, signal transduction, spliceosome, unclassified drug
Abstract

Human cyclin D1 is expressed as two isoforms derived by alternate RNA splicing, termed D1a and D1b, which differ for the inclusion of intron 4 in the D1b mRNA. Both isoforms are frequently upregulated in human cancers, but cyclin D1b displays relatively higher oncogenic potential. The splicing factors that regulate alternative splicing of cyclin D1b remain unknown despite the likelihood that they contribute to cyclin D1 oncogenicity. In this study, we report that Sam68, an RNA-binding protein frequently overexpressed in prostate cancer cells, enhances splicing of cyclin D1b and supports its expression in prostate cancer cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and RNA coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that Sam68 is recruited to the human CCND1 gene encoding cyclin D1 and that it binds to cyclin D1 mRNA. Transient overexpression and RNAi knockdown experiments indicated that Sam68 acts to enhance endogenous expression of cyclin D1b. Minigene reporter assays showed that Sam68 directly affected alternative splicing of CCND1 message, with a preference for the A870 allele that is known to favor cyclin D1b splicing. Sam68 interacted with the proximal region of intron 4, and its binding correlated inversely with recruitment of the spliceosomal component U1-70K. Sam68-mediated splicing was modulated by signal transduction pathways that elicit phosphorylation of Sam68 and regulate its affinity for CCND1 intron 4. Notably, Sam68 expression positively correlates with levels of cyclin D1b, but not D1a, in human prostate carcinomas. Our results identify Sam68 as the first splicing factor to affect CCND1 alternative splicing in prostate cancer cells, and suggest that increased levels of Sam68 may stimulate cyclin D1b expression in human prostate cancers. ©2010 AACR.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-75149187424&doi=10.1158%2f0008-5472.CAN-09-2788&partnerID=40&md5=fc970f2bf47030a52051eff62494a50a
DOI10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-09-2788
Citation KeyParonetto2010229