4.3 Article

MiR-486-5p negatively regulates oncogenic NEK2 in hepatocellular carcinoma

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 32, Pages 52948-52959

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.17635

Keywords

NEK2; MiR-486-5p; hepatocellular carcinoma; tumor progression; prognosis

Funding

  1. National High Technology Research and Development Program of China (863Program) [2012AA021007, 2012AA021008]
  2. Key Clinical Project from the Ministry of Health [2010159]
  3. Special Fund for Science Research by Ministry of Health [201302009]
  4. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory Construction Projection on Organ Donation and Transplant Immunology [2013A061401007]
  5. Guangdong Provincial international Cooperation Base of Science and Technology (Organ Transplantation) [2015B050501002]
  6. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2015M582474]
  7. Natural Science of Guangdong Province [2016A030310177]
  8. Science and Technology Project of Guangdong Province [2016A020215184]

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NEK2 is a member of the NIMA-related family of serine/threonine centrosomal kinases. We analyzed the relationship between differential expression of NEK2 and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patient outcomes after liver transplants. We also studied the microRNAs that affect NEK2 expression. Analysis of multiple microarrays in the Oncomine database revealed that NEK2 expression was higher in HCC tissues than adjacent normal liver tissues. High NEK2 expression correlated with tumor size, pathological grade and macro-and microvascular invasion. Consequently, patients exhibiting high NEK2 expression had poorer prognosis. This was corroborated by our multivariate analysis that showed NEK2 to be an independent prognostic factor for HCC patient survival. Further, high NEK2 expression promoted proliferation, colony formation, migration and invasion of HCC cell lines. Tumor xenograft data from Balb/c nude mice demonstrated that HCC cells with high NEK2 expression formed larger tumors than those with low NEK2 expression. Finally, we showed that miR-486-5p suppressed NEK2 by directly binding to its transcript 3'UTR. We also demonstrated an inverse relationship between miR-486-5p and NEK2 expression in HCC patients. These findings suggest miR-486-5p negatively regulates NEK2, which is a critical prognostic indicator of HCC patient survival after liver transplantation.

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