Background & AimsThe homeostasis of the cellular transcriptome depends on transcription and splicing mechanisms. Moreover, the fidelity of gene expression, essential to preserve cellular identity and function is secured by different quality control mechanisms including nonsense-mediated RNA decay (NMD). In this context, alternative splicing is coupled to NMD, and several alterations in these mechanisms leading to the accumulation of aberrant gene isoforms have been involved in human disease including cancer. MethodsRNAseq, Westen blot, qPCR, co-IP in multiple silenced culture cell lines (replicates n≥4), primary hepatocytes and samples of animal models (Jo2, APAP, Mdr2-/- mice, n≥3). ResultsHere we describe that in animal models of liver injury and in human HCC (TCGA, NT =50 vs HCC =374), the process of NMD is inhibited. Moreover, we demonstrate that the splicing factor SLU7 interacts with and preserves the levels of the NMD effector UPF1, and that SLU7 is required for a correct NMD. Our previous findings demonstrated that SLU7 expression is reduced in the diseased liver, contributing to hepatocellular de-differentiation and genome instability during disease progression. However, little was known about the mechanisms underlying SLU7 downregulation. Here we provide evidence showing that caspases activated during liver damage would be responsible of the cleavage and degradation of SLU7. ConclusionsHere we identify the downregulation of UPF1 and the inhibition of NMD as a new molecular pathway contributing to the malignant reshaping of the liver transcriptome. Moreover, and importantly, we uncover caspases activation as the mechanism responsible for the downregulation of SLU7 expression during liver disease progression, which is a new link between apoptosis an hepatocarcinogenesis. Impact and implicationsThe mechanisms involved in the reshaping of hepatocellular transcriptome driving the progressive loss of cell identity and function in liver disease are not completely understood. In this context, we provide evidence on the impairment of a key mRNA surveillance mechanism known as nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). Mechanistically, we uncover a novel role for the splicing factor SLU7 in the regulation of NMD, including its ability to interact and preserve the levels the key NMD factor UPF1. Moreover, we demonstrate that the activation of caspases during liver damage mediates SLU7 and UPF1 proteins degradation and NMD inhibition. Our findings identify potential new markers of liver disease progression, and SLU7 as a novel therapeutic target to prevent the functional decay of the chronically injured organ.
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