4.6 Article

The Overexpression of Acyl-CoA Medium-Chain Synthetase-3 (ACSM3) Suppresses the Ovarian Cancer Progression via the Inhibition of Integrin β1/AKT Signaling Pathway

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.644840

Keywords

ovarian cancer; acyl-CoA medium-chain synthetase-3; integrin β 1; proliferation; metastasis

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Funding

  1. 345 Talent Project, Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University
  2. Young Backbone Teachers Projects of China Medical University, 345 Talent Project [QGZD2018063]

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ACSM3, as a tumor suppressor gene, is down-regulated in ovarian cancer tissues and its overexpression can inhibit cell proliferation, migration, and invasion of ovarian cancer cells by negatively regulating the Integrin beta 1/AKT signaling pathway. These findings suggest that ACSM3 may serve as a potential therapeutic target for ovarian cancer.
Ovarian cancer is considered as one of the most fatal gynecologic malignancies. This work aimed to explore the effects and regulatory mechanism of Acyl-CoA medium-chain synthetase-3 (ACSM3, a subunit of CoA ligases) in ovarian cancer progression. As well as employing CCK-8 assay, clone formation assay, and cell cycle analysis were carried out to investigate cell proliferation ability. Wound healing assay and transwell assay were subsequently used to assess cell migration and invasion. Mice xenografts were then conducted to measure the effects of ACSM3 on tumor development in vivo. Our bioinformatics analysis suggested that the expression of ACSM3 was down-regulated in ovarian cancer tissues, and the low expression level of ACSM3 might related with poorer overall survival than high mRNA expression of ACSM3 in ovarian cancer patients. We artificially regulated the expression of ACSM3 to evaluate its effects on ovarian cancer malignant phenotypes. Our data revealed that the overexpression of ACSM3 inhibited cell proliferation, migration, and invasion of ovarian cancer cells. In contrast, the knock-down of ACSM3 received the opposite results. Our western blot results showed that the Integrin beta 1/AKT signaling pathway was negatively regulated by ACSM3 expression. Moreover, ACSM3 overexpression-induced suppression of cell migration and invasion activities were abolished by the overexpression of ITG beta 1 (Integrin beta 1). Additionally, the growth of ovarian cancer xenograft tumors was also repressed by the overexpression of ACSM3. And ACSM3 interference obtained the contrary effects in vivo. In summary, ACSM3 acts as a tumor suppressor gene and may be a potential therapeutic target of ovarian cancer.

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