Abstract

Several theories on the origin of adenomyosis (ADS) have been proposed, of which the most widely accepted is the fundamental pathogenic role of uterine eutopic endometrium. Emerging evidence suggests that circular RNAs participate in the multiple tumorgenesis. The vital importance of circular RNA PVT1 (circPVT1) in the pathological progress like malignancies has been well documented. Nevertheless, its underlying correlation with ADS remains elusive yet. The purpose of this study was to investigate the expression pattern, regulatory effect, and internal mechanism of circPVT1 in ADS. qRT-PCR was performed to detect the relative mRNA expression of circPVT1, miR-145, and Talin1 in ADS endometrial tissue and cells. The protein level of Talin1 was measured by Western blot and immunochemistry. Immunofluorescence was used to identify the primary endometrial epithelial and stromal cells. circPVT1 knockdown in vitro was achieved by transfecting with specific lentivirus vector CCK-8, and colony formation assays were utilized to assess cell proliferation; meanwhile, the transwell assay was employed for evaluating cell invasion ability. By conducting bioinformatics, dual-luciferase reporter assay, or RNA immunoprecipitation (RIP) experiment, the interaction between miR-145 and circPVT1 or Talin1 was verified. Rescue experiments further determined the regulatory effect of circPVT1/miR-145/Talin1 axis. We found both circPVT1 and Talin1 were markedly upregulated in ADS endometrial tissue and cells, whereas miR-145 was decreased. Elevated expression of circPVT1 was closely related to the severity of dysmenorrhea, menorrhagia, and uterine enlargement of patients with ADS. Knockdown of circPVT1 inhibited adenomyotic epithelial and stromal cell proliferation and invasion. Further mechanistic experiments revealed that circPVT1 negatively regulated miR-145 through serving as a molecular sponge. And the facilitating effect of circPVT1 was partially reversed by miR-145. Talin1 was demonstrated to be a down target of miR-145 and indirectly affected by circPVT1. Our findings unveiled that enhanced circPVT1 may be involved in the pathogenesis of ADS via stimulating endometrial cell proliferation and invasion. The establishment of circPVT1/miR-145/Talin1 pathway might present a novel therapeutic insight for ADS.

Highlights

  • Adenomyosis (ADS), typically characterized by ingravescent dysmenorrhea, menorrhagia, and female subfertility, is a common benign and refractory gynecological disorder

  • The results indicated that miR-145 decreased cell viability while circPVT1 alone had the most significant acceleration on the cell proliferation

  • The results showed that Talin1 mRNA would get increased once circPVT1 upregulated or miR-145 inhibited individually

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Summary

Introduction

Adenomyosis (ADS), typically characterized by ingravescent dysmenorrhea, menorrhagia, and female subfertility, is a common benign and refractory gynecological disorder. Previous studies have considered changes in the biological features of eutopic epithelial and stromal cells, BioMed Research International such as enhancement of cell proliferation, invasiveness, and dynamics that might be closely related to the occurrence and progression of adenomyosis [2, 3]. Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a new class of endogenous noncoding RNAs, deriving from exons and/or introns. They are featured as higher circulating stability, tissue specific, and abundant expression, which endow circRNAs with more stable biological functions and become potential candidate biomarkers for disease diagnosis and prognosis [4]. To our best knowledge, whether circRNAs are involved in ADS is largely unknown

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