4.7 Article

Hypomethylation-driven AKT Serine/Threonine Kinase 3 promotes testicular germ cell tumors proliferation and negatively correlates to immune infiltration

Journal

BIOENGINEERED
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 11288-11302

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21655979.2021.2002621

Keywords

TGCT; AKT3; methylation; proliferation; immunity

Funding

  1. Changsha Municipal Natural Science Foundation [kq2014033]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hunan Province [2021JJ41025]
  3. Guangzhou Municipal/University (High-Level University) Joint Funded Basic Research Program [202102010055]
  4. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2019A1515010755]
  5. Medical Key Discipline of Guangzhou [2021-2023]
  6. Hunan Provincial Grant for Innovative Province Construction [2019SK4012]

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AKT3 is upregulated and frequently amplified in TGCT, leading to poor survival outcomes, while loss-of-function mutations in AKT3 are associated with better prognosis. Silencing AKT3 inhibits proliferation and colony formation in TGCT cells. AKT3 may be involved in TGCT progression through multiple signaling pathways and its upregulation may be driven by promoter hypomethylation.
AKT Serine/Threonine Kinase 3 (AKT3) has been reported to play an important role in different tumors. However, its clinical value, biological function, and molecular mechanism in testicular germ cell tumors (TGCT) remains unclear. In the current study, we applied the Gene Set Cancer Analysis (GSCA), UCSC XENA, Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO), the Human Protein Atlas (HPA), LinkedOmics, DiseaseMeth version 2.0, TISIDB, and other databases for TGCT data mining. Then, we investigated AKT3's mechanism of action and clinical survival significance via bioinformatics followed by in vitro experiments. We found that AKT3 was upregulated and had frequent copy number amplifications in TGCT, which were associated with poor survival outcomes of patients. On the other hand, mutations that led to AKT3 loss-of-function were correlated to a better prognosis in patients. Moreover, AKT3 silencing significantly inhibited the proliferation, DNA synthesis and colony formation of NCCIT cells (a TGCT cell line). AKT3 might participate in TGCT progression through multiple signaling pathways, such as ErbB, oxidative phosphorylation, and affecting tumor immune infiltration. Also, the upregulation of AKT3 mRNA expression might be driven by the hypomethylation of its promoter region. Overall, AKT3 is a potential TGCT oncogene and can be further used as a therapeutic target.

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