Abstract

Although crucial roles of microRNA have begun to emerge, detailed studies with ATL patients have not been achieved. Using 40 primary ATL samples and 22 samples of normal CD4+ T-cells, we determined the microRNA signatures of ATL and revealed loss of miR-31, which has recently been reported as a metastasis-associated miRNA. All ATL cases invariably showed undetectable or very low levels of miR-31, clearly implying that miR-31 loss is involved in ATL development. As a novel miR-31 target gene, we identified NF-κB inducing kinase (NIK) that plays central roles in noncanonical signaling and constitutive activation of NF-κB in various cancers, including ATL. Restoration of miR-31 downregulated the levels of NIK and NF-κB activity, resulting in reduction of malignant phenotypes, containing proliferative index, anti-apoptosis, and chemotaxis in ATL cells. Furthermore, lentivirus-introduced miR-31 could induce strong apoptosis in primary tumor cells freshly isolated from ATL patients, indicating pivotal functions of miR-31 as a tumor suppressor. Global copy number profiling demonstrated that 21 cases out of 168 (12.5%) have genomic loss of 9p21 containing miR-31 region. Furthermore, expression profiling and ChIP assay showed requirement of overexpression of histone methyltransferase in epigenetic suppression of miR-31 and aberrant NF-κB activation in primary ATL cells. Knockdown of methyltransferase complex restored the miR-31 expression and consequently inhibited NIK-dependent NF-κB cascade. These findings illustrated that genetic and epigenetic abnormalities link to NF-κB activation through the loss of miR-31. Considering aberrant epigenomics associated with cancers, the emerging relationship provides us a conceptual advance in understanding the broad-acting oncogenic signaling.

Highlights

  • Crucial roles of microRNA have begun to emerge, detailed studies with ATL patients have not been achieved

  • Using 40 primary ATL samples and 22 samples of normal CD4+ T-cells, we determined the microRNA signatures of ATL and revealed loss of miR31, which has recently been reported as a metastasisassociated miRNA

  • As a novel miR-31 target gene, we identified NF-B inducing kinase (NIK) that plays central roles in noncanonical signaling and constitutive activation of NF-B in various cancers, including ATL

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Summary

Introduction

Crucial roles of microRNA have begun to emerge, detailed studies with ATL patients have not been achieved. Genetic and epigenetic loss of miR-31 activates NIK-dependent NF-B pathway in Adult T-cell Leukemia Makoto Yamagishi1, Kazumi Nakano1, Tadanori Yamochi1, Ariko Miyake1, Yayoi Kagami1, Akihisa Tsutsumi1, Aiko Otsubo2, Seishi Ogawa2, Atae Utsunomiya3, Kazunari Yamaguchi4, Kaoru Uchimaru5, Toshiki Watanabe1* Using 40 primary ATL samples and 22 samples of normal CD4+ T-cells, we determined the microRNA signatures of ATL and revealed loss of miR31, which has recently been reported as a metastasisassociated miRNA.

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