Abstract
While the androgen receptor (AR) may influence the progression of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), its role to impact vasculogenic mimicry (VM) to alter the ccRCC progression and metastasis remains obscure. Here, we demonstrated that elevated AR expression was positively correlated with tumor-originated vasculogenesis in ccRCC patients. Consistently, in vitro research revealed AR promoted VM formation in ccRCC cell lines via modulating lncRNA-TANAR/TWIST1 signals. Mechanism dissection showed that AR could increase lncRNA-TANAR (TANAR) expression through binding to the androgen response elements (AREs) located in its promoter region. Moreover, we found that TANAR could impede nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) of TWIST1 mRNA by direct interaction with TWIST1 5′UTR. A preclinical study using in vivo mouse model with orthotopic xenografts of ccRCC cells further confirmed the in vitro data. Together, these results illustrated that AR-mediated TANAR signals might play a crucial role in ccRCC VM formation and metastasis, and targeting this newly identified AR/TANAR/TWIST1 signaling may help in the development of a novel anti-angiogenesis therapy to better suppress the ccRCC progression.
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Introduction
Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), the major subtype of aggressive human malignancies, accounted for approximately 1,000,000 cases and 175,000 deaths worldwide in 2018 [1]. Despite the shift towards early stages at diagnosis, fatal metastasis, or rapid recurrence occurred in 1/3 to 1/4 of cases [2]. For most metastatic RCC, anti-angiogenesis therapy, such as treatment with sunitinib and pazopanib, as well as with vascular endothelial growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), has proved its efficacy. However, the vast majority of patients will ultimately acquire resistance and relapse, and some patients are inherently refractory to the targeted therapy [3, 4]. Hence, the detailed mechanisms of RCC progression and angiogenesis need to be comprehensively understood for the development of better efficacies.
The androgen receptor (AR) can promote progression and hematogenous metastasis in ccRCC through ASS1P3/miR-34a-5p/ASS1 and miR-185-5p/HIF-2a/VEGF signaling, respectively [5, 6]. This is consistent with the higher incidence and more malignant phenotypes in males according to data from the surveillance epidemiology and end results database [7]. Furthermore, targeting AR with the antiandrogen enzalutamide (Enz) could restore sunitinib sensitivity in the sunitinib-resistant PDX mouse model, suggesting enhancing TKI efficacy through inhibition of AR to better suppress ccRCC progression [8]. Paradoxically, a higher expression of AR is associated with better prognosis based on a retrospective analysis from the TCGA database, indicating that AR function in ccRCC is complex and may be tumor stage-dependent [9].
Besides the classical tumor angiogenesis, Maniotis et al. demonstrated a de novo pattern of tumor perfusion in melanomas, named vasculogenic mimicry (VM), in which cancer cells form their own supplying channel without endothelial cells [10]. Due to its ability to circulate blood from vessels to tumor tissues and to facilitate tumor cells into the extracellular matrix, VM plays a significant role in boosting tumor growth as well as promoting metastasis, which contributes to poor prognosis and aggressiveness in many cancers [11,12,13,14,15,16]. On the other hand, as an alternative nutrient supplement, VM complements the cancer vasculature theory and provides a mechanistic alternative for the inherently or acquired resistance to anti-angiogenesis therapy [17]. Periodic acid Schiff (PAS) staining and CD31 (or CD34) immunohistochemistry (IHC) have been widely used to identify VM formation in vivo [10]. In addition to Matrigel architecture, a novel collagen-induced migration program of VM, characterized by short fibers and small pores provides another in vitro assay to mimic the VM formation in vivo [18]. Although this unique vascular channel formation was first reported in kidney cancer in 2013 [19], to date the VM molecular pathway in RCC still remains poorly understood.
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), a class of untranslated transcripts longer than 200 nucleotides barely with protein-coding capacity, participate in diverse biological processes [20]. Mounting evidence has proved lncRNAs significantly influence the pathogenesis of cancers via transcriptional regulation or direct interaction with miRNAs, mRNAs, and proteins in a multitude of molecular pathways [21]. Recently, lncRNAs have been shown to also modulate genitourinary malignancies via different pathways including proliferation, apoptosis, angiogenesis, and drug resistance. However, little is known about the potential role of lncRNAs involved in VM formation [4, 22,23,24,25].
In this study, we aimed to determine the biological function of AR in ccRCC VM. Mechanism dissection revealed that the lncRNA-TANAR, which is regulated by AR, might increase the oncogene TWIST1 expression through competitive binding to TWIST1 mRNA to reduce the activity of Up-frameshift protein 1 (UPF1), the core factor required for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay [26].
Results
AR expression may influence VM presence in ccRCC patients
To clarify the clinical significance of VM on ccRCC, we collected 51 ccRCC human specimens along with their clinicopathological data and performed the HE & PAS/CD31 double staining to detect VM (Fig. 1a). The VM was significantly higher in Stage II and Stage III compared with Stage I (Fig. 1b). There is no statistical difference between males and females in any TNM Stage (Supplementary Fig. 1a). However, the result shows the VM occurs more frequently in males than in females when both had a high degree of malignancy (Stage II and Stage III) (Fig. 1c). Interestingly, based on Higgins renal microarray dataset [27] and the cancer genome atlas (TCGA) DNA copy number data, we found both AR mRNA and genomic DNA content increased in ccRCC (Fig. 1d, e). Next, we detected the AR expression via IHC in 51 ccRCC samples (36 males and 15 females), then separated patients into the AR-positive group and the AR-negative group (Fig. 1f). As shown in Fig. 1g, AR expression is positively correlated with higher VM formation. Moreover, immunofluorescence (IF) analysis in human clinical samples revealed that high AR expression was positively correlated and colocalized with Laminin 5γ2, a specific VM marker [28] (Fig. 1h).
To further validate the positive correlation between AR and VM formation in vitro, we treated RCC 786O AR-low-positive cell line and SW839 AR-high-positive cell line with 10 nM dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and 10 µM enzalutamide (Enz), an FDA approved antiandrogen, respectively. As shown in Fig. 1i, 1j and Supplementary Fig. 1c, AR agonist DHT could increase both Matrigel-coated 2D and collagen I-based 3D VM formation, while AR antagonist Enz dramatically suppressed 2D and 3D VM formation only in the AR-positive cell line. Next, we knocked down the AR expression via adding two AR-shRNA (shAR1# and shAR2#) in RCC AR-positive SW839 cells (Fig. 1k, left panel and Supplementary Fig. 1g) and OSRC-2 cells Supplementary Fig. 1d, and found a decreased 2D and 3D VM formation (Fig. 1l, 1m, left panel and Supplementary Fig. 1e–i). In contrast, overexpressing AR via adding AR-cDNA (oeAR) in AR-weakly positive 786O cells (Fig. 1k, right panel) and SW839 cells (Supplementary Fig. 1c) led to more VM formation in both 2D and 3D conditions (Fig. 1l, 1 m, right panel).
Taken together, results from Fig. 1a–m and Supplementary Fig. 1a–i demonstrate that AR may play a positive role to affect the ccRCC VM formation.
AR can induce TWIST1 to promote VM formation in ccRCC in vitro
To dissect the molecular basis for AR’s effect on ccRCC VM formation, we screened the known critical genes linked with VM via qRT-PCR assay in RCC 786O cells after adding AR-cDNA (Fig. 2a, left panel) or RCC SW839 cells after adding shAR plasmid (Fig. 2a, right panel) to examine if any of those VM-related genes may be responsive to altering AR expression [29, 30]. The result showed that TWIST1 mRNA level was the only VM-related gene positively correlated with AR (threshold ≥ 0.3 fold of Log10) (Fig. 2a). Consistent with this, western blot assay further showed that knocking down AR in SW839 cells could decrease TWIST1, a dominant VM-promoting gene [31, 32], and overexpressing AR in 786O cells had the opposite effect (Fig. 2b).
In order to confirm whether AR induced VM formation through TWIST1, we applied rescue experiments adding TWIST-cDNA (oeTWIST1) into SW839 cells and TWIST1-shRNA (shTWIST1) into 786O cells (Fig. 2c, d). The results revealed that shTWIST1 in 786O cells could partially reverse the elevated VM formation induced by AR overexpression. In contrast, oeTWIST1 in SW839 cells increased VM formation, especially after knocking down the endogenous AR (Fig. 2e, f). Similarly, Harmine [33, 34], which is a TWIST1 inhibitor through its degradation at the protein level (Fig. 2g), could dramatically block the effect of overexpressing AR on VM formation of RCC cells (Fig. 2h–i).
Together, results from Fig. 2a–i indicate that AR may function through modulating TWIST1 expression to influence the Matrigel-coated 2D and collagen I-based 3D VM formation in vitro.
Human clinical sample analysis for TWIST1 expression in the ccRCC versus para-tumor non-cancerous tissues
To examine the role of TWIST1 in ccRCC clinical samples, we detected its expression by IHC in 23 pairs of samples derived from ccRCC tumors and adjacent normal tissues (Fig. 2j) and the results showed a higher expression of TWIST1 was detected in tumors than in paired adjacent normal tissues (p < 0.001; n = 23) (Fig. 2k), which was consistent with the results extracted from TCGA mRNA database (Fig. 2l). Furthermore, AR is positively correlated with TWIST1 based on 51 ccRCC IHC samples (Fig. 2m). Additionally, based on TCGA online database UALCAN (http://ualcan.path.uab.edu/), we found elevating TWIST1 levels (using 25% of samples with the highest TWIST1 expression) led to a significantly lower survival rate in ccRCC patients (Fig. 2n). In addition, as our cohort is shown in Supplementary Fig. 1b, VM occurred more frequently in the TWIST1 high expression group.
Mechanism dissection of how AR alters TWIST1 expression: via modulating the lncRNA-TANAR expression
Since AR could elevate TWIST1 expression at both protein and mRNA levels (see Fig. 2a, b), we then focused on whether AR increases TWIST1 expression via transcriptional regulation. Results from qPCR assay performed on 786O and SW839 cells treated for 2 h with 10 nM DHT and 10 µM Enz, respectively, showed no difference in mRNA levels, indicating AR may not regulate TWIST1 transcriptionally (Supplementary Fig. 2a). Intriguingly, after treating 786O oeAR cells or SW839 shAR cells with actinomycin D for different periods of time to measure the decay of TWIST1 mRNA (Fig. 3a, b), we found that oeAR resulted in an increase in the half-life of TWIST1 mRNA, whereas shAR decreased its half-life implying that AR could stabilize TWIST1 mRNA. To further dissect the detailed mechanism, we tested whether AR could regulate miRNA targeting TWIST1 to exert its function (Fig. 3a, b). As miRNA usually destabilizes its target genes in the Ago2-containing RISC complex (RNA-induced silencing complex) [35, 36], we performed immunoprecipitation of Ago2 followed by detection of TWIST1 mRNA. The results showed that overexpressing AR contributed to a slight increase of TWIST1 mRNA level in the Ago2 complex, indicating that AR may not modulate TWIST1 via altering miRNAs (Supplementary Fig. 2b).
We then moved to the lncRNAs, as recent studies indicated that lncRNA may bind to the 5′UTR of target mRNA to regulate mRNA level [37, 38]. To examine whether lncRNAs might be involved in regulating TWIST1 mRNA level, we first applied a bioinformatic analysis to identify potential lncRNAs capable of interacting with TWIST1 mRNA 5′UTR and overlapped the results with lncRNAs overexpressed (logFC > 1, P < 0.05) in Sunitinib resistance cells from the GSE69535 dataset (Fig. 3c and Supplemental Table 1). As shown in Fig. 3d, five candidates (ENST00000436510.1, ENST00000471626.1, ENST00000593604.1, ENST00000425110.1, and ENST00000377977.3) changed significantly after altering AR in 786O and SW839 cells. Furthermore, results from the RNA pull-down assay via TWIST1 mRNA showed that overexpressing AR in 786O cells could lead to ENST00000425110.1 and ENST00000377977.3 binding more to TWIST1 mRNA compared with pWPI group (Fig. 3e).
At the same time, knocking down these candidates (Supplementary Fig. 2c) indicated that knockdown of ENST00000425110.1 and ENST00000377977.3 could suppress TWIST1 expression more in the oeAR group than in the control group (Fig. 3f). In addition, western blot assays revealed that only ENST00000425110.1 overexpression could rescue the decline in TWIST1 protein induced by knocking down AR. As expected, the overexpressed AR-elevated TWIST 1 protein level decreased drastically via knockdown of ENST00000425110.1 (TANAR) (Fig. 3g, h and Supplementary Fig. 2d–f). Consistent with these results, we also found that overexpressing ENST00000425110.1 in SW839 cells could increase VM formation, especially after knocking down the endogenous AR (Fig. 3k). In contrast, overexpressed AR-increased ccRCC VM could be partially blocked by adding ENST00000425110.1-shRNA in 786O cells (Fig. 3i–l). Consistent with this, activating AR through 10 nM DHT in 786O cells could increase ENST00000425110.1 expression while blocking AR with 10 µM Enz in SW839 cells led to a decrease in its expression (Supplementary Fig. 2g, h). Therefore, we named this lncRNA as TANAR (Twist1 Associated Long Noncoding RNA regulated by AR) based on the above analyzes and focused on this lncRNA for the remaining studies.
Through Ensemble software and Lncpedia database, we found that the position of TANAR, with little protein-coding function, is in chromosome 2: 240,981,515-240,986,072 (Supplementary Fig. 3a, b). Furthermore, subcellular fraction analysis, as well as FISH assay, revealed that TANAR was distributed in both cytoplasm and nuclei of cells (Fig. 3m, n), consistent with online analysis (http://www.csbio.sjtu.edu.cn/bioinf/lncLocator/) predicting the location of TANAR (Supplementary Fig. 3c).
Together, from Fig. 3a–n, Supplementary Fig. 2a–f, and Supplementary Fig. 3a–c, we found a novel lncRNA-TANAR that is regulated by AR via altering TWIST1 expression and inducing VM formation in ccRCC cells.
Mechanism dissection of how AR alters TANAR expression: via transcriptional regulation
To further dissect the potential molecular mechanism of how AR regulates the TANAR expression at the transcriptional level, we applied the Ensembl and PROMO 3.0 websites to search for the androgen response elements (AREs) in the 2 kb region of the TANAR promoter by using the JASPAR database (Fig. 4a) and detected five putative AREs (I −1150nt to −1136nt, II/III −602nt to −586nt and VI/V −94nt to −41nt) (Fig. 4b). Next, we performed the chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay, and results revealed that AR could specifically bind to ARE II&III, but not the other AREs (Fig. 4c). Furthermore, we mutated the critical sequences of ARE II/III and inserted the mutant (MT) promoter region of TANAR into pGL3 luciferase plasmid as well as the wild-type (WT) promoter (Fig. 4d). As expected, the luciferase assay results showed that knocking down AR or adding Enz 10 µM significantly lessened luciferase activity in SW839 cells transfected with WT reporter, but not in the cells with the MT reporter (Fig. 4e left and Supplementary Fig. 3e). In contrast, overexpressing AR or adding DHT 10 nM could drastically increase luciferase activity in 786O or SW839 cells with the WT reporter, but not in the cells with the reporter containing the MT ARE (Fig. 4e right and Supplementary Fig. 3d).
Together, results from Fig. 4a–e and Supplementary Fig. 3d–e suggested that AR could directly increase TANAR expression transcriptionally through binding to the ARE II/III.
Mechanism dissection of how TANAR can alter TWIST1 expression: via modulating nonsense-mediated mRNA decay by competitive binding of UPF1 to TWIST1 mRNA
To dissect the molecular mechanism underlying AR/TANAR’s regulation on TWIST1 expression, especially the impact of AR on TWIST1 mRNA stability (see Fig. 3a, b), we hypothesized that TANAR could modulate TWIST1 mRNA stability via the TANAR-TWIST1 interaction, as was shown with the presence of TANAR in TWIST1 pull-down assay (see Fig. 3e) [37, 39, 40]. Indeed, mRNA stability assay, using treatment with actinomycin, revealed that knocking down TANAR could block the overexpressing AR-increased TWIST1 mRNA stability (Fig. 5a). Furthermore, to test whether this binding is crucial for TANAR’s regulation on TWIST1 mRNA, we constructed WT TANAR cDNA sequence and mutated it by deleting the TANAR-TWIST presumptive binding region (Fig. 5b and Supplementary Fig. 4a, b). Compared to the pWPI group, 786O cells transfected with MT TANAR-cDNA failed to increase TWIST1 mRNA and protein levels (Fig. 5c, d). Moreover, mRNA stability assay, using actinomycin treatment, showed that AR knockdown-decreased TWIST1 mRNA stability could be rescued only by adding wild-type TANAR (Fig. 5e). The FISH assay in SW839 cells also showed that TANAR could colocalize with TWIST1 mRNA (left panel), and we found that using Image J colocalization analyzer the Pearson’s correlation coefficient (PCC) is 0.6554 (right panel) (Fig. 5f). Taken together, these data confirmed that the stabilizing effect of TANAR relies on its direct binding of TWIST1 mRNA.
Intriguingly, based on Ensembl database (http://uswest.ensembl.org/) and individual-nucleotide-resolution UV cross-linking and immunoprecipitation (iCLIP) performed by Zünd [41], TWIST1 mRNA could interact with the indispensable component for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD)-UPF1 through at least 12 binding sites (Supplementary Table 2), and then be regulated by NMD process via rapid degradation as its mRNA conforms to a canonical NMD structure (Supplementary Fig. 4c) [26].
To test whether TANAR could alter TWIST1 mRNA via influencing NMD, we performed a western blot to see the effect of TANAR on NMD core factors, UPF1, and SMG1 [42] expression. We found that overexpressing TANAR could not reduce either UPF1 or SMG1 protein levels (Supplementary Fig. 4d). However, the RNA immunoprecipitation assay by pull-down of TWIST1 mRNA using biotin-conjugated antisense oligonucleotide revealed that ectopic expression of wild-type TANAR could effectively diminish TWIST1 mRNA-UPF1 interaction in ccRCC, while their interaction was increased after knocking down TANAR (Fig. 6a–d). Consistent with that, overexpressing wild-type TANAR, but not mutant TANAR, reduced TWIST1 level in the UPF1 immunoprecipitation (Fig. 6e). Knocking down TANAR significantly increases the TWIST1 level in UPF1 immunoprecipitation (Fig. 6f).
In order to further validate the function of TANAR on the NMD process of TWIST1, we generated luciferase report constructs replacing TWIST1 coding region with luciferase cDNA while maintaining the overall gene structure of TWIST1 genomic locus (pWPI-luc-TWIST1). We also generated two mutant reporters with mutations in the conserved splicing sequence to eliminate the NMD initiation (pWPI-luc-mutant 1) and TANAR-interacting region in the 5′UTR (pWPI-luc-mutant 2) (Fig. 6g). As expected, the results showed that overexpressing AR could significantly increase luciferase activity in 786O cells with pWPI-luc-TWIST1, but not in the cells with either pWPI-luc-mutant 1 or pWPI-luc-mutant 2 (Fig. 6h). Consistent with this, knocking down AR significantly reduced luciferase activity in SW839 cells transfected with pWPI-luc-TWIST1, but not in the cells with either of the 2 mutant plasmids (Fig. 6i). When treating cells with DHT or Enz, we found the same tendency (Supplementary Fig. 4e, f). Moreover, only 786O cells cotransfected with WT TANAR cDNA sequence and pWPI-luc-twist1, not with TANAR MT TANAR-cDNA or pWPI and pWPI-luc-mutant 1 or pWPI-luc-mutant 2, showed increased luciferase activity (Fig. 6j). The luciferase activity decreased only when knocking down TANAR in SW839 cells transfected with pWPI-luc-TWIST1 (Fig. 6k).
Together, results from Fig. 6a–k and Supplementary Fig. 4a–f suggest TANAR suppresses UPF1-TWIST1 mRNA interaction, thus reduces nonsense-mediated decay of TWIST1 mRNA to increase its mRNA stability (diagram in Fig. 6l).
Preclinical study using in vivo mouse model to confirm the role of AR/TANAR/TWIST1 axis in ccRCC VM
To further test the validity of the above in vitro data, we applied the orthotopic ccRCC xenograft mouse model. We generated stable clones of 786O cells with luciferase expression with overexpressed AR and/or sh-TANAR as well as a control, with 5 mice/group (1: Scr + luc; 2: oeAR + luc; 3: sh-TANAR + luc; and 4: oeAR + sh-TANAR + luc). A total of 1 × 106 786O cells mixed with matrigel were inoculated into the left kidney capsule of nude mice and tumor progressions were evaluated via the non-invasive in vivo imaging system (IVIS). After 6 weeks, we observed that increased bioluminescence signals in the whole mice (Fig. 7a–d), as well as in the left kidney in the oeAR xenografted groups while knocking down TANAR could partly reverse the oeAR-increased high chemiluminescence in ccRCC xenografts. Furthermore, IVIS showed a dramatic increase of metastatic luciferase signals (as seen in the liver, intestine, diaphragm, spleen, and testis) in the oeAR group and less metastasis occurred in the sh-TANAR group than in the control group (Fig. 7e–j). Upon animal sacrifice, and retrieval of tumors and metastases, we found targeting the TANAR with sh-lncRNA-TANAR could partly reverse the oeAR-promoted ccRCC metastasis foci (Fig. 7k). Importantly, results from IHC staining demonstrated that oeAR led to increasing the TWIST1 expression as well as VM vessel area (PAS+/CD31−), which could be partly reversed by sh-TANAR (Fig. 7l–n).
Together, the results are shown in Fig. 7a–n are consistent with the in vitro cell lines studies and proved that targeting AR/lnc-TANAR/TWIST1 axis could prevent VM formation in the tumor tissue and consequently suppress tumor progression and metastasis.
Discussion
The epithelium-dependent angiogenesis has been long regarded as the sole blood supplement initiated by proangiogenic factors. The conception of VM, epithelium-independent angiogenesis, reinforces the tumor neovascularization theory, indicating that targeting critical factors regulating VM formation in the tumor could be a novel anti-angiogenesis therapy to stop tumor cells [30].
Recent literature revealed that VM formation is an independent and relevant prognostic criterion for disease-free survival in patients with ccRCC [43, 44]. Similarly, based on 51 ccRCC clinical samples, we found a higher tumor stage tends to possess more VM channels (Fig. 1b). Interestingly, across our cohort, VM formation exists predominantly in males compared to females in Stage II&III (Fig. 1c). However, consistent with a previous study [44], once we brought in Stage I clinical data, VM formation shows no significant difference between male and female (Supplementary Fig. 1a), which could be partly due to the scarce incidence of VM in Stage I patients in a larger male patient population lowering overall VM and a lack of gender difference (Fig. 1b).
Mounting evidence has demonstrated that AR functions as an oncogene in ccRCC, promoting progression and hematogenous metastasis [5, 6, 22], despite the presence of few retrospective literature-based on the TCGA database implied AR may contribute to better prognosis in RCC [9]. However, its role in VM formation remains unclear. Based on our formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) ccRCC tissue samples, expression of AR was detected more frequently in patients with higher VM presence, indicating that AR was positively correlated with VM formation (R = 0.3947; P < 0.001; Fig. 1d, e). Although AR could act as a marker for the aggressive VM, the clinical data revealed that some AR negative and VM positive cases do exist, suggesting that AR may not be the exclusive regulator of VM. Consistent with pathological data, ectopic expression or DHT-induced activation of AR increases, whereas knockdown of AR or Enz-induced inactivation of AR decreases, the classical Matrigel-coated 2D VM formation. In 2017, Velez developed a de novo 3D in vitro collagen-induced migration procedure to detect VM. We utilized this 3D collagen-I-induced model to further confirm AR’s influence on VM formation. Moreover, we have also proved the role of AR in the formation of VM in vivo via the orthotopic implantation model, finding increased VM formation, increased tumor progression, and more metastases in xenografts established by cells with AR overexpression. Taken together, our study highlights the significance of AR in both in vitro and in vivo VM formation in a physiological way for the first time.
A previous study revealed that AR could upregulate TWIST1 via ETV1 in prostate cancer [45]. Similarly in RCC cells, AR can also increase TWIST1 expression through an indirect mechanism through lncRNA-TANAR to impact RCC VM development. There appears a tissue-specific mechanism for AR to regulate TWIST1 expression. TWIST1 is a basic helix-loop-helix transcriptional factor, which plays important role in epithelial-mesenchymal transition and VM in diverse types of tumors [33, 46, 47]. The previous literature-based on 163 ccRCC clinical samples revealed that elevated levels of TWIST1, which is mainly localized in the cytoplasm of ccRCC cells (98.8%), was closely associated with higher stage, vascular invasion, and poor prognosis in RCC [48]. In addition, it has been reported that TWIST1 could transcriptionally regulate VE-cadherin, a transmembrane protein responsible for cell–cell adhesion and VM formation, in multiple types of tumor cells [49, 50]. Not surprisingly, our clinical tissue samples demonstrated that TWIST1 expression is positively correlated with VM formation (Supplementary Fig. 1b; R = 0.34; P < 0.001), which is consistent with our in vivo or in vitro data. Furthermore, we treated ccRCC cell with Harmine, a naturally occurring beta-carboline alkaloid widely used herb, as a TWIST1 inhibitor selected through the unbiased screen and validated in the lung cells [33, 34], and found that it led to dramatic degradation of TWIST1 protein at either 10 μM or 40 μM while also drastically diminished VM formation in ccRCC cells. Thus, targeting TWIST1 signaling might be a promising therapy for ccRCC with high VM formation.
Increasing evidence indicates that TWIST1 could be post-transcriptionally modulated via noncoding RNA [51,52,53]. The lncRNAs could sponge microRNAs to regulate the TWIST1 expression, and then influence tumorigenesis. Moreover, NMD, which is a conserved cellular mRNA surveillance system, can degrade TWIST1 transcripts via recognition of termination codons before the last exon in TWIST1 mRNA [54, 55]. On the one hand, cancer cells have utilized NMD to decrease gene expression by deliberate reduction of vital tumor-suppressor mRNAs [56]. On the other hand, cancer cells could fine-tune NMD activity to adapt to harsh microenvironments [57]. Previous studies have shown several lncRNAs could regulate mRNA decay via interacting with up-frameshift protein 1 (UPF1) [58, 59]. In this study, we identified a novel lncRNA-TANAR, as an AR-transcriptionally-regulated lncRNA, is able to promote TWIST1 mRNA stability by suppressing NMD via competitive binding with UPF1 to the TWIST1 mRNA 5′UTR. Intriguingly, previous studies showed that UPF1 mostly targets 3′ untranslated region of mRNA to exert NMD function [60] while TANAR binds to the 5′UTR region of the TWIST1 mRNA. To further validate the role of NMD in regulating TWIST1 mRNA, we scrutinized iCLIP-seq data and found 12 confirmed UPF1 protein-TWIST1 mRNA binding sites [26], partly overlapping with the predicted TANAR-TWIST1 mRNA interaction region. Based on our RIP assays and luciferase analyzes (Fig. 6a–k), we show lncRNA-TANAR increases TWIST1 mRNA stability via directly binding to its 5′UTR with disruption of UPF1 initiating nonsense-mediate TWIST1 mRNA decay. This suggests a role of 5′UTR in regulating NMD likely through the loop formation between the 5′UTR and 3′UTR of mRNA.
In conclusion, we characterized a new long noncoding RNA TANAR transcriptionally regulated by AR, which influences VM formation by decreasing TWIST1 mRNA nonsense-mediated decay. Targeting the AR/lncRNA-TANAR/TWIST1 axis could be a promising strategy for the development of better treatment of ccRCC.
Methods and materials
Patients and samples
A total of 51 histologically confirmed ccRCC tissue samples with 23 paired adjacent noncancerous tissues were collected between August 1, 2014 and February 1, 2016 from the Department of Urology, the Second Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University (Harbin, China). Patients were excluded if they had been treated previously with neoadjuvant chemotherapy or TKIs. All samples collected for use in research after patients signed the consent of the scientific ethics were fixed in 10% formalin and then embedded in paraffin. Our research was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the hospital in advance.
Cell culture and reagents
786O, SW839, and HEK293T cell lines were purchased from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Manassas, VA). Cells were cultured in DMEM media with 1% penicillin and streptomycin, containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS). All cells were maintained in a humidified 5%(v/v) CO2 incubator at 37 °C. According to ATCC’s protocol, all cell lines used in the paper have been authenticated and proven to be mycoplasma and bacteria-free and were periodically re-authenticated by PCR.
Western blot
Cells were washed twice with cold PBS and lysed in cell lysis buffer and equal proteins (30–50 μg) were loading, mixed, boiled, and separated on 6–12% SDS/PAGE gel, then transferred onto PVDF membranes (Millipore, Billerica, MA). We blocked the PVDF membranes for 1 h via 5% skim milk and incubated with the specific primary antibodies overnight. After incubated with HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies, the PVDF membranes were visualized using the ECL system (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Rochester, NY). Primary antibodies used in the study for western blot are listed in Table S1.
In vivo studies
All experimental procedures were performed in accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and use of laboratory animals, conformed to the regulations for animal experimentation, and reviewed by the Institutional Laboratory Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Rochester Medical Center. Male athymic BALB/c nude mice (6–8 weeks old) were obtained from the Animal Production Area of the National Cancer Institute-Fredrick Cancer Research and Development Center in Frederick, MD, USA. 786-O cells transfected with Scr-luc, oeAR-luc, shTANAR-luc, or oeAR+shTANAR, were injected at 1 × 106 cells/mouse, into the left renal capsule of 8-week-old male athymic nude mice (n = 5 mice/group). After 6 weeks, mice were sacrificed, and tumors were excised and measured.
Statistics
Experiments were repeated independently at least three times with data points completed in triplicate. Results are shown as mean ± S.D. Statistical significance was determined using the Student’s t-test and two-way ANOVA test by SPSS 22 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY) or GraphPad Prism 6 (GraphPad Software, Inc., La Jolla, CA). P values less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, and ***P < 0.001).
Data availability
The datasets used and analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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This work was supported by George Whipple Professorship. We thank Karen Wolf for help preparing the manuscript.
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This work was supported by NIH grant (CA155477).
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You, B., Sun, Y., Luo, J. et al. Androgen receptor promotes renal cell carcinoma (RCC) vasculogenic mimicry (VM) via altering TWIST1 nonsense-mediated decay through lncRNA-TANAR. Oncogene 40, 1674–1689 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-020-01616-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-020-01616-1
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