Abstract

Epigenetic modulation is an important mechanism of miRNA dysregulation in cervical cancer. In this study, we firstly studied how this mechanism contributes to miR-375 downregulation in cervical cancer cells. Then, we further studied the association between miR-375 and MALAT1 (metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1) in epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) of the cancer cells. HPV-16 positive SiHa and CaSki cells were used as in vitro model. Our data showed that HPV-16 E6 positively modulated DNMT1 expression in both SiHa and CaSki cells. Knockdown of DNMT1 partly restored miR-375 levels in the cells. The following methylation-specific PCR (MSP) assay and qRT-PCR analysis showed that methylation was common in the promoter region of miR-375 in both SiHa and CaSki cells and demethylation partly restored miR-375 levels in the cells. Therefore, we infer that miR-375 is downregulated partly due to promoter hypermethylation mediated by DNMT1 in HPV-16 positive cervical cancer cells. Our bioinformatics analysis showed that MALAT1 has three putative binding sites with miR-375 and the following dual luciferase assay confirmed two of them. QRT-PCR analysis showed that miR-375 overexpression significantly reduced MALAT1 expression, while MALAT1 overexpression reversely suppressed miR-375 levels. Therefore, we infer that there is a reciprocal regulation between miR-375 and MALAT1 in the cells. In SiHa cells, miR-375 overexpression or MALAT1 siRNA partly restored E-cadherin expression, significantly reduced N-cadherin and also reduced invasion capacity of SiHa cells. Therefore, these results suggest that miR-375 and MALAT1 form a functional axis modulating EMT in cervical cancer.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer is the third most frequent cancer in women [1, 2]

  • We demonstrated that miR-375 is epigenetically downregulated due to promoter hypermethylation in cervical cancer cells, which is mediated by HPV-16 E6 enhanced DNMT1 upregulation

  • We observed that there is a reciprocal regulation between miR-375 and MALAT1, which is involved in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) of cervical cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

It is clear that persistent infection of high risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV), typically HPV-16 and HPV-18 is the key risk factor of cervical carcinogenesis [3]. HPV-16 and HPV-18 infection is observed in over 70% of cervical cancer cases [4]. E6 and E7 gene silencing results in decreased methylation of tumor suppressor genes in several human cervical carcinoma cell lines [7]. Knockdown of E6 in HPV-16 positive human cervical carcinoma SiHa and CaSki cells directly led to repression of DNMT1 protein by decreasing promoter activity [8]. DNMT1 is an important enzyme modulating DNA methylation [9] and its dysregulation is associated with malignant phenotype and methylated gene expression in cervical cancer cells [10]

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