RBM8A promotes gastric cancer progression by binding with UPF3B to induce BBC3 mRNA degradation.
1/5 보강
RNA metabolism is an important post‑transcriptional regulatory mode in organisms, and its process is cooperatively regulated by a variety of RNA‑binding proteins.
- p-value P<0.05
APA
Peng H, Zhang L, et al. (2025). RBM8A promotes gastric cancer progression by binding with UPF3B to induce BBC3 mRNA degradation.. International journal of molecular medicine, 56(3). https://doi.org/10.3892/ijmm.2025.5572
MLA
Peng H, et al.. "RBM8A promotes gastric cancer progression by binding with UPF3B to induce BBC3 mRNA degradation.." International journal of molecular medicine, vol. 56, no. 3, 2025.
PMID
40613240
Abstract
RNA metabolism is an important post‑transcriptional regulatory mode in organisms, and its process is cooperatively regulated by a variety of RNA‑binding proteins. RNA binding motif protein 8A (RBM8A), a regulator of mRNA stability that is implicated in cancer progression, serves an important role in processes such as RNA splicing, transport, translation and decay. However, to the best of our knowledge, its role in the occurrence and development of gastric cancer (GC), as well as its biological functions and molecular mechanisms remain unclear. In the present study, RBM8A expression was on average 1.4‑fold higher (P<0.05), with a maximum log2 fold change of 1.4 (2.6‑fold increase), in GC tissues compared with adjacent normal tissues, as determined by multiplex immunohistochemical analysis of tissue microarrays. , transfection of RBM8A small interfering RNAs significantly suppressed the proliferation of AGS and HGC27 cells and enhanced apoptosis. Specifically, annexin V‑positive AGS cells exhibited a 2.9‑fold increase with siRBM8A‑1 transfection and a 1.9‑fold increase with siRBM8A‑2 transfection, while annexin V‑positive HGC27 cells exhibited a 2.3‑fold increase with siRBM8A‑1 transfection and a 1.8‑fold increase with siRBM8A‑2 transfection (P<0.05). Using MKN45 cell lines and subcutaneous xenograft models, the present study revealed that RBM8A knockdown reduced subcutaneous tumor growth in nude mice by 51.5% in terms of volume and 62.4% in terms of weight (P<0.05). In terms of the mechanism, integrated mRNA‑sequencing (seq) and RNA immunoprecipitation (RIP)‑seq identified BCL2 binding component 3 (BBC3), a well‑characterized pro‑apoptotic gene, as a direct target of RBM8A. Further results of RIP‑quantitative PCR, fluorescence hybridization‑immunofluorescence and RNA pulldown indicated the direct interaction between RBM8A and BBC3 mRNA. Actinomycin D assays demonstrated that RBM8A promoted BBC3 mRNA degradation. Subsequently, the co‑immunoprecipitation assay showed that RBM8A interacted with UPF3B to jointly regulate the stability of BBC3 mRNA. In conclusion, RBM8A inhibited apoptosis and promoted GC progression by interacting with UPF3B, leading to degradation of the pro‑apoptotic gene BBC3 mRNA. These findings highlighted that interfering with RBM8A expression, or disrupting the interactions between RBM8A and BBC3 mRNA or between RBM8A and UPF3B could serve as potential therapeutic strategies for GC.
🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH
- Humans
- RNA-Binding Proteins
- Stomach Neoplasms
- Animals
- RNA Stability
- Cell Line
- Tumor
- Mice
- Male
- Cell Proliferation
- Disease Progression
- Gene Expression Regulation
- Neoplastic
- Female
- Apoptosis
- Nuclear Factor 90 Proteins
- RNA
- Messenger
- Nude
- Middle Aged
- Inbred BALB C
- Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins
- Protein Binding
- Peptide Termination Factors
… 외 5개
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- Adjustable spot wide-field Raman spectroscopy combined with machine learning for accurate classification of breast cancer cells.
- Spatial single-cell multi-omics characterization of the tumor microenvironment heterogeneity by HER-2 expression status in gastric cancer.
- A small molecule inhibitor of ARF GTPase protein 1 limits liver and colon cancer cell growth and metastasis.
- Iatrogenic pneumothorax associated with surgeries at anatomically thoracic-adjacent and non-adjacent sites: case report and scoping review.
- Exploring the role of hepsin in prostate cancer: bioinformatics, molecular Docking and molecular dynamics simulations.