Abstract

BackgroundDysregulation of RNA binding protein (RBP) expression has been confirmed to be causally linked with tumorigenesis. The detailed biological effect and underlying mechanisms of the RBP GRSF1 in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remain unclear.MethodsHCC cells with stable knockdown of GRSF1 were established using two sh-RNA-encoding lentiviruses. The functions of GRSF1 in HCC were explored using MTT, colony formation, flow cytometry, and Transwell assays and a xenograft model. Transcriptomic sequencing in GRSF1-deficient MHCC-97H cells was carried out to identify the downstream effector of GRSF1. The regulatory mechanisms among GRSF1, YY1 and miR-30e-5p were investigated via RNA immunoprecipitation, luciferase, RNA pull-down and ChIP assays. Several in vivo assays were used to assess the selectivity of the small-molecule compound VE-821 in HCC and to confirm the absence of general toxicity in animal models.ResultsGRSF1 was frequently increased in HCC tissue and cells and was associated with worse clinical outcomes. GRSF1 functions as a novel oncogenic RBP by enhancing YY1 mRNA stability, and the GUUU motifs within the YY1 3`UTR 2663-2847 were the specific binding motifs for GRSF1. YY1 feedback promoted GRSF1 expression by binding to the GRSF1 promoter. In addition, YY1 was a critical target of miR-30e-5p, which was confirmed in this study to inhibit HCC hepatocarcinogenesis. GRSF1 and miR-30e-5p competitively regulated YY1 by binding to its 3`UTR 2663-2847 region. Finally, we identified that VE-821 blocked HCC progression by inhibiting the GRSF1/YY1 pathway.ConclusionThis study revealed the interaction network among GRSF1, YY1 and miR-30e-5p, providing new insight into HCC pathogenesis, and indicated that VE821 may serve as a novel agent with potential for HCC treatment through inhibition of the GRSF1/YY1 axis.

Highlights

  • Dysregulation of RNA binding protein (RBP) expression has been confirmed to be causally linked with tumorigenesis

  • G-rich sequence binding factor 1 (GRSF1) is increased in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and associated with poor prognosis Analysis of public datasets (Cancer Genome Atlas, TCGA) suggested that GRSF1 expression was elevated in HCC tissues compared with normal tissues (p

  • The binding site of Yin-Yang 1 (YY1) for miR-30e-5p partially overlapped with GRSF1 binding sites (Fig. 5D), and our results showed that miR-30e-5p and GRSF1 are antagonistic in the regulation of YY1

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Summary

Introduction

Dysregulation of RNA binding protein (RBP) expression has been confirmed to be causally linked with tumorigenesis. The detailed biological effect and underlying mechanisms of the RBP GRSF1 in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remain unclear. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers worldwide and has a poor prognosis [1, 2]. Recent observations have implicated GRSF1 in cancer progression. GRSF1 drives the metastasis of cervical cancer cells via the PIK3R3/AKT/NF-κB and TIMP3/MMP9 pathways [15]. GRSF1 was revealed to promote cervical cancer by enhancing TMED5 and LMNB1 expression [16]. The current study is the first to discover that GRSF1 is frequently increased in HCC and promotes hepatocarcinogenesis as an RBP

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