학술논문

The natural antisense transcript HAS2-AS1 regulates breast cancer cells aggressiveness independently from hyaluronan metabolism.
Document Type
Article
Source
Matrix Biology. May2022, Vol. 109, p140-161. 22p.
Subject
*BREAST cancer
*TRIPLE-negative breast cancer
*CANCER cells
*GENE expression profiling
*EPITHELIAL-mesenchymal transition
*LINCRNA
*HYALURONIC acid
Language
ISSN
0945-053X
Abstract
• The survival probability of patients with estrogen receptor (ER) negative breast cancer is higher when the expression of HAS2-AS1 is elevated. • HAS2-AS1 overexpression reduces cell aggressiveness only of ER negative and not of ER positive cell lines. • HAS2-AS1 regulates neither hyaluronan accumulation nor hyaluronan synthases expression in ER negative breast cancer cells. • Microarray gene expression profiling reveals that HAS2-AS1 has a pivotal role to regulate the expression of several genes involved in tumorigenesis. • Overexpression of the Long isoform of HAS2-AS1 exon 2 induces mesenchymal to epithelial transition in ER negative breast cancer cells. Hyaluronan (HA) is a ubiquitous extracellular matrix component playing a crucial role in the regulation of cell behaviors, including cancer. Aggressive breast cancer cells tend to proliferate, migrate and metastatize. Notably, triple-negative breast cancer cells lacking the expression of estrogen receptor (ER) as well as progesterone receptor and HER2 are more aggressive than ER-positive ones. As currently no targeted therapy is available for triple-negative breast cancer, the identification of novel therapeutic targets has a high clinical priority. In ER-negative cells, tumoral behavior can be reduced by inhibiting HA synthesis or silencing the enzymes involved in its metabolism, such as HA synthase 2 (HAS2). HAS2-AS1 is a long non-coding RNA belonging to the natural antisense transcript family which is known to favor HAS2 gene expression and HA synthesis, thus bolstering malignant progression in brain, ovary, and lung tumors. As the role of HAS2-AS1 has not yet been investigated in breast cancer, in this work we report that ER-positive breast cancers had lower HAS2-AS1 expression compared to ER-negative tumors. Moreover, the survival of patients with ER-negative tumors was higher when the expression of HAS2-AS1 was elevated. Experiments with ER-negative cell lines as MDA-MB-231 and Hs 578T revealed that the overexpression of either the full-length HAS2-AS1 or its exon 2 long or short isoforms alone, strongly reduced cell viability, migration, and invasion, whereas HAS2-AS1 silencing increased cell aggressiveness. Unexpectedly, in these ER-negative cell lines, HAS2-AS1 is involved neither in the regulation of HAS2 nor in HA deposition. Finally, transcriptome analysis revealed that HAS2-AS1 modulation affected several pathways, including apoptosis, proliferation, motility, adhesion, epithelial to mesenchymal transition, and signaling, describing this long non-coding RNA as an important regulator of breast cancer cells aggressiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]