4.7 Article

Aspirin Mediates Its Antitumoral Effect Through Inhibiting PTTG1 in Pituitary Adenoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 107, Issue 11, Pages 3066-3079

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgac496

Keywords

pituitary adenoma; pituitary; pitNET; methylation; demethylation; epigenetic; biomarker; pttg1

Funding

  1. Hungarian Scientific Research Grant of the National Research, Development and Innovation Office [NKFI FK 135065]
  2. Bolyai Research Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  3. National Laboratories Excellence program (National Tumor Biology Laboratory proiect) [NLP17]
  4. Hungarian Thematic Excellence Programme [TKP2021-EGA-44]
  5. Higher Education Institutional Excellence Programme of the Ministry of Human Capacities in Hungary within Semmelweis University

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This study revealed that aspirin can induce global DNA demethylation and consequential transcriptome changes in pituitary cells, leading to decreased cell proliferation and migration. Aspirin also regulates the activity of Tp53 and the expression of Pttg1, which are involved in cell cycle control. The findings suggest that aspirin may have potential beneficial effects in PitNET.
Context: DNA demethylation and inhibitory effects of aspirin on pituitary cell proliferation have been demonstrated. Objective: Our aim was to clarify the molecular mechanisms behind the aspirin-related effects in pituitary cells. Methods: DNA methylome and whole transcriptome profile were investigated in RC-4B/C and GH3 pituitary cell lines upon aspirin treatment. Effects of aspirin and a demethylation agent, decitabine, were further tested in vitro. PTTG1 expression in 41 human PitNET samples and whole genome gene and protein expression data of 76 PitNET and 34 control samples (available in Gene Expression Omnibus) were evaluated. Results: Aspirin induced global DNA demethylation and consequential transcriptome changes. Overexpression of Tet enzymes and their cofactor Uhrf2 were identified behind the increase of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC). Besides cell cycle, proliferation, and migration effects that were validated by functional experiments, aspirin increased Tp53 activity through p53 acetylation and decreased E2f1 activity. Among the p53 controlled genes, Pttg1 and its interacting partners were downregulated upon aspirin treatment by inhibiting Pttg1 promoter activity. 5hmC positively correlated with Tet1-3 and Tp53 expression, and negatively correlated with Pttg1 expression, which was reinforced by the effect of decitabine. Additionally, high overlap (20.15%) was found between aspirin-regulated genes and dysregulated genes in PitNET tissue samples. Conclusion: A novel regulatory network has been revealed, in which aspirin regulated global demethylation, Tp53 activity, and Pttg1 expression along with decreased cell proliferation and migration. 5hmC, a novel tissue biomarker in PitNET, indicated aspirin antitumoral effect in vitro as well. Our findings suggest the potential beneficial effect of aspirin in PitNET.

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