4.6 Article

NFκB2 p52 stabilizes rhogdiβ mRNA by inhibiting AUF1 protein degradation via a miR-145/Sp1/USP8-dependent axis

Journal

MOLECULAR CARCINOGENESIS
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages 777-793

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mc.22970

Keywords

AUF1; NF kappa B2 (p52); RhoGDI beta; Sp1; USP8

Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [CA112557, CA165980, CA177665, CA217923]
  2. NIH/NIEHS [ES000260]
  3. Grant Project of Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology [02.03.2017-317]

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Although overexpression of the non-canonical NF kappa B subunit p52 has been observed in several tumors, the function and mechanism of p52 in bladder cancer (BC) are less well understood. Here, we aimed at understanding the role and mechanism underlying p52 regulation of BC invasion. Human p52 was stably knockdown with shRNA targeting p52 in two bladder cancer cell lines (T24 and UMUC3). Two constitutively expressing constructs, p52 and p100, were stably transfected in to T24 or UMUC3, respectively. The stable transfectants were used to determine function and mechanisms responsible for p52 regulation of BC invasion. We demonstrate that p52 mediates human BC invasion. Knockdown of p52 impaired bladder cancer invasion by reduction of rhogdi beta mRNA stability and expression. Positively regulation of rhogdi beta mRNA stability was mediated by p52 promoting AUF1 protein degradation, consequently resulting in reduction of AUF1 binding to rhogdi beta mRNA. Further studies indicated that AUF1 protein degradation was mediated by upregulating USP8 transcription, which was modulated by its negative regulatory transcription factor Sp1. Moreover, we found that p52 upregulated miR-145, which directly bound to the 3 '-UTR of sp1 mRNA, leading to downregulation of Sp1 protein translation. Our results reveal a comprehensive pathway that p52 acts as a positive regulator of BC invasion by initiating a novel miR-145/Sp1/USP8/AUF1/RhoGDI beta axis. These findings provide insight into the understanding of p52 in the pathology of human BC invasion and progression, which may be useful information in the development of preventive and therapeutic approaches for using p52 as a potential target.

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