4.4 Article

Silencing Osteopontin Expression Inhibits Proliferation, Invasion and Induce Altered Protein Expression in Melanoma Cells

Journal

PATHOLOGY & ONCOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 27, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/pore.2021.581395

Keywords

osteopontin expression; osteopontin knockdown; protein expression profile; melanoma progression; invasion; proliferation

Funding

  1. National Research Development and Innovation Fund [K-112327]
  2. European Regional Development Fund [GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00005, UNKP-19-3]
  3. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology [MTA11010, TK2016-78]

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The study showed that inhibiting OPN expression with siRNA can decrease proliferation and invasion of melanoma cells, affecting the expression of key proteins. Additionally, protein profile analysis and STRING analysis can predict interactions and pathways of these proteins.
Osteopontin (OPN) is a multifunctional phosphoprotein that is expressed in different types of cancers, including melanoma. OPN overexpression is associated with tumor progression and metastasis formation; however, the role of OPN in cell invasion and metastasis formation is not completely understood. In this study we aimed to define OPN expression in melanoma tissues and cell lines and investigate the effect of OPN expression on cell proliferation and invasion after inhibiting OPN expression with small interfering RNA (siRNA). OPN gene expression was determined by qRT-PCR, while protein expression was examined using a Proteome Profiler Oncology Array. siRNA-mediated OPN knockdown led to decreased OPN expression in melanoma cell lines, which was associated with decreased cell proliferation and invasion. Proteome profile analysis revealed significantly different protein expression between the original and transfected cell lines. The altered expression of the differently expressed proteins was validated at the mRNA level. Furthermore, OPN-specific siRNA was able to reduce OPN expression and inhibit the invasiveness of melanoma cells. Our results revealed for the first time that silencing the OPN gene influences proliferation and invasion of melanoma cells by effecting EGFR, tenascin C, survivin, galectin-3 and enolase 2 expression. To predict protein-protein interactions along with putative pathways we used STRING analysis for the differentially expressed proteins. These proteins formed multiple clusters, including extracellular matrix organization, regulation of angiogenesis, cell death and cell migration, PI3K-Akt, MAPK and focal adhesion signaling pathways. Taken together these data suggest that OPN might be an ideal target for drug development and therapies.

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