4.8 Article

EGFR modulates microRNA maturation in response to hypoxia through phosphorylation of AGO2

Journal

NATURE
Volume 497, Issue 7449, Pages 383-387

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature12080

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [CA109311, CA099031, CA16672]
  2. US National Breast Cancer Foundation
  3. Center for Biological Pathway at the UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, S. G. Komen [SAC110016]
  4. Sister Institution Fund of China Medical University and Hospital
  5. UT MD Anderson Cancer Center
  6. Cancer Research Center of Excellence, Taiwan [D0H102-TD-C-111-005]
  7. Private University grant, Taiwan [NSC99-2632-B-039-001-MY3]
  8. Program for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Frontier Research, Taiwan [NSC101-2321-B-039-001]

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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are generated by two-step processing to yield small RNAs that negatively regulate target gene expression at the post-transcriptional level(1). Deregulation of miRNAs has been linked to diverse pathological processes, including cancer(2,3). Recent studies have also implicated miRNAs in the regulation of cellular response to a spectrum of stresses(4), such as hypoxia, which is frequently encountered in the poorly angiogenic core of a solid tumour(5). However, the upstream regulators of miRNA biogenesis machineries remain obscure, raising the question of how tumour cells efficiently coordinate and impose specificity on miRNA expression and function in response to stresses. Here we show that epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), which is the product of a well-characterized oncogene in human cancers, suppresses the maturation of specific tumour-suppressor-like miRNAs in response to hypoxic stress through phosphorylation of argonaute 2 (AGO2) at Tyr 393. The association between EGFR and AGO2 is enhanced by hypoxia, leading to elevated AGO2-Y393 phosphorylation, which in turn reduces the binding of Dicer to AGO2 and inhibits miRNA processing from precursor miRNAs to mature miRNAs. We also identify a long-loop structure in precursor miRNAs as a critical regulatory element in phospho-Y393-AGO2-mediated miRNA maturation. Furthermore, AGO2-Y393 phosphorylation mediates EGFR-enhanced cell survival and invasiveness under hypoxia, and correlates with poorer overall survival in breast cancer patients. Our study reveals a previously unrecognized function of EGFR in miRNA maturation and demonstrates how EGFR is likely to function as a regulator of AGO2 through novel post-translational modification. These findings suggest that modulation of miRNA biogenesis is important for stress response in tumour cells and has potential clinical implications.

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