4.8 Article

Nuclear scaffold protein p54nrb/NONO facilitates the hypoxia-enhanced progression of hepatocellular carcinoma

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 40, Issue 24, Pages 4167-4183

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-021-01848-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81771858, 81530053, 81601524]
  2. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Molecular Imaging [18DZ2260400]

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The multifunction scaffold protein p54(nrb)/NONO has been found to play a crucial role in regulating hypoxia transcription signals, enhancing liver cancer progression. Clinical data has shown that NONO is significantly upregulated and associated with poor prognosis in HCC patients. NONO interacts with HIF-1/2 complexes and their downstream transcripts to facilitate the expression of hypoxia-induced genes, suggesting its potential as a therapeutic target for HCC.
Hypoxia and related oxidative stress are closely related to the development and treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, the mechanism mediated by hypoxia in HCC has not yet been elucidated. Here, we found multifunction scaffold protein p54(nrb)/NONO exerted pleiotropic effects to regulate hypoxia transcription signals, thereby enhancing the progression of liver cancer. Extensive analysis of clinical data demonstrated that NONO was significantly upregulated and represented as a poor prognostic indicator of HCC. The crucial role of NONO in driving angiogenesis and glycolysis, two well-known cancer phenotypes mediated by hypoxia, was examined in vitro an in vivo. Mechanistically, NONO interacted with and stabilized both HIF-1 and HIF-2 complexes thus activating the transcription of hypoxia-induced genes. Besides, NONO bound pre-mRNA and subsequent mRNA of these genes to facilitate them splicing and mRNA stability, respectively. Thus, NONO knockout seriously disrupted the expression of a cluster of HIF-1/2 targets and impeded hypoxia-enhanced progression in HCC. In conclusion, NONO functioned as a multipurpose scaffold that interacted with HIF-1/2 complex and their downstream transcripts to facilitate the expression of hypoxia-induced genes, allowing malignant proliferation, indicating that NONO might be a potential therapeutic target for HCC.

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