Abstract

Aberrant activation of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway is implicated in most malignant cancers, especially in the initiation and progression of colorectal cancer (CRC). DKK4 is a classical inhibitory molecule of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway, but its role in CRC is ambiguous, and the molecular mechanism remains unclear. Here, we determined DKK4 expression was significantly upregulated in 23 CRC cell lines and 229 CRC tissues when analyzed by quantitative PCR and immunohistochemistry, respectively. Our analysis of tissue samples indicated the survival time of CRC patients with high DKK4 expression was longer than that of patients with medium-low DKK4 expression. We examined the effects of DKK4 on cell proliferation and metastasis by cell counting kit-8 assays, transwell assays, and subcutaneous and metastatic mouse tumor models, and we discovered that DKK4 silencing promoted the metastasis of CRC cells both invitro and invivo. Our RNA-seq analysis revealed that AKT2, FZD6, and JUN, which play important roles in AKT and Wnt signaling, were significantly increased after DKK4 knockdown. DKK4 represses Wnt/β-catenin signaling by repressing FZD6 and AKT2/s552 β-catenin in CRC. Further experiments revealed recombinant Wnt3a and LiCl could induce DKK4 expression. Moreover, our bioinformatics analysis and luciferase reporter assays identified posttranscriptional regulators of DKK4 in CRC cells. In summary, DKK4 is elevated in CRC and inhibits cell metastasis by a novel negative feedback mechanism of the Wnt3a/DKK4/AKT/s552 β-catenin regulatory axis to restrict overactivation of Wnt activity in CRC. Therefore, DKK4 restoration may be applied as a potential CRC therapeutic strategy.

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