Abstract

Sperm-associated antigen 5 (SPAG5) is an important driver of the cell mitotic spindle required for chromosome segregation and progression into anaphase. SPAG5 has been identified as an important proliferation marker and chemotherapy-sensitivity predictor, especially in estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer subtypes. Here, we report that SPAG5 is a direct target of miR-10b-3p, and its aberrantly high expression associates with poor disease-free survival in two large cohorts of breast cancer patients. SPAG5 depletion strongly impaired cancer cell cycle progression, proliferation, and migration. Interestingly, high expression of SPAG5 pairs with a YAP/TAZ-activated signature in breast cancer patients. Reassuringly, the depletion of YAP, TAZ, and TEAD strongly reduced SPAG5 expression and diminished its oncogenic effects. YAP, TAZ coactivators, and TEAD transcription factors are key components of the Hippo signaling pathway involved in tumor initiation, progression, and metastasis. Furthermore, we report that SPAG5 is a direct transcriptional target of TEAD/YAP/TAZ, and pharmacological targeting of YAP and TAZ severely reduces SPAG5 expression. Collectively, our data uncover an oncogenic feedback loop, comprising miR-10b-3p, SPAG5, and YAP/TAZ/TEAD, which fuels the aberrant proliferation of breast cancer.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most frequent type of tumor and the main cause of cancer-related death among womenEdited by G Melino

  • We focused on sperm-associated antigen 5 (SPAG5), a recently described promoter of breast tumor growth [19] and a poor prognosis marker of breast cancer [18]

  • Our observations raised the possibility that miR-10b-3p directly regulates transcripts encoding Sperm-associated antigen 5 (SPAG5), a gene associated with the aggressive behavior of mammary tumors

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Summary

Introduction

MiR-10b-3p’s expression is significantly anticorrelated to SPAG5’s transcript level. The latter associates with poor survival in two different cohorts of breast cancer patients, METABRIC and TCGA datasets. High expression of SPAG5 is linked to the transcriptional signature of activated YAP/TAZ in breast cancer patients, implying the involvement of YAP/TAZ in the oncogenic activity of SPAG5. We further report that SPAG5 is a direct transcriptional target of the YAP/TAZ/TEAD axis, such that YAP/TAZ depletion diminishes SPAG5’s oncogenic potential. Normalized miRNA and gene expression of breast cancer patients was obtained from Metabric dataset and Broad Institute TCGA Genome Data Analysis Center (2016): TCGA data from Broad GDAC Firehose 2016_01_28 run.

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