4.6 Article

The ERH gene regulates migration and invasion in 5637 and T24 bladder cancer cells

Journal

BMC CANCER
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12885-019-5423-9

Keywords

ERH gene; Bladder cancer; MYC gene; Migration and invasion

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Fund [81774089]
  2. Jiangsu Province, the medical innovation team [CXTD-2016-48]
  3. Jiangsu Provincial Social Development Project [BE2015623]
  4. Jiangsu Province, key research and development program [BE2017635]
  5. Jiangsu Province, young medical talents [QNRC2016386]
  6. Jiangsu Xuzhou, technology plan project [KC18036]
  7. Jiangsu Provincial Traditional Chinese Medicine Bureau of Science and Technology Project [YB2017055]
  8. Ningbo Natural Science Foundation [2017A610194]

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BackgroundThis study aimed to determine whether the enhancer of the rudimentary homolog (ERH) gene regulates cell migration and invasion in human bladder urothelial carcinoma (BUC) T24 cells and the underlying mechanism.MethodsFirst, we knocked down ERH in BUC T24 and 5637 cells by shRNA and then used wound healing cell scratch migration assays, transwell cell migration assays, transwell cell invasion chamber experiments and nude mouse tail vein transfer assays to determine the migration and invasion ability after ERH was knocked down. Moreover, we used gene expression profiling chip analysis and further functional experiments to explore the possible mechanism through which ERH knockdown downregulated metastasis ability in T24 cells.ResultsWound healing cell scratch migration assays, transwell cell migration assays, transwell cell invasion chamber experiments and nude mouse tail vein transfer assays all showed that the metastasis ability was significantly inhibited in human BUC T24 and 5637 cells with ERH knockdown. A gene expression profiling chip analysis in T24 cells showed that the MYC gene may be an important downstream target of the ERH gene, and the functional experiments showed that MYC is a functional target of ERH in BUC T24 cells.ConclusionERH knockdown could inhibit the metastasis of BUC T24 cells in vitro and in vivo. This study further explored the mechanism of the ERH gene in the metastasis of the T24 human bladder cancer cell line and found that ERH may regulate MYC gene expression. The results of this research provide a basis for the clinical application of ERH as a potential target for BUC treatment.

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