학술논문

An mRNA processing pathway suppresses metastasis by governing translational control from the nucleus
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Cell Biology. 25(6)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Breast Cancer
Genetics
Cancer
Biotechnology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Humans
Animals
Mice
Female
RNA Processing
Post-Transcriptional
Breast Neoplasms
RNA
Messenger
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
Cancer cells often co-opt post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms to achieve pathologic expression of gene networks that drive metastasis. Translational control is a major regulatory hub in oncogenesis; however, its effects on cancer progression remain poorly understood. Here, to address this, we used ribosome profiling to compare genome-wide translation efficiencies of poorly and highly metastatic breast cancer cells and patient-derived xenografts. We developed dedicated regression-based methods to analyse ribosome profiling and alternative polyadenylation data, and identified heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C (HNRNPC) as a translational controller of a specific mRNA regulon. We found that HNRNPC is downregulated in highly metastatic cells, which causes HNRNPC-bound mRNAs to undergo 3' untranslated region lengthening and, subsequently, translational repression. We showed that modulating HNRNPC expression impacts the metastatic capacity of breast cancer cells in xenograft mouse models. In addition, the reduced expression of HNRNPC and its regulon is associated with the worse prognosis in breast cancer patient cohorts.