JOURNAL ARTICLE

Elevated SRPK1 lessens apoptosis in breast cancer cells through RBM4-regulated splicing events

Jung-Chun LinChing‐Yu LinWoan‐Yuh TarnFang-Yu Li

Year: 2014 Journal:   RNA Vol: 20 (10)Pages: 1621-1631   Publisher: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

Abstract

Imbalanced splicing of premessenger RNA is typical of tumorous malignancies, and the regulatory mechanisms involved in several tumorigenesis-associated splicing events are identified. Elevated expression of serine-arginine protein kinase 1 (SRPK1) may participate in the pathway responsible for the dysregulation of splicing events in malignant tumor cells. In this study, we observed a correlation between the cytoplasmic accumulation of RNA-binding motif protein 4 (RBM4) and up-regulated SRPK1 in breast cancer cells. The production of the IR-B and MCL-1 S transcripts was induced separately by the overexpression of RBM4 and SRPK1 gene silencing. Overexpressed RBM4 simultaneously bound to the CU-rich elements within the MCL-1 exon2 and the downstream intron, which subsequently facilitated the exclusion of the regulated exon. Breast cancer cells are deprived of apoptotic resistance through the RBM4-mediated up-regulation of the IR-B and MCL-1 S transcripts. These findings suggest that the splicing events regulated by the SRPK1-RMB4 network may contribute to tumorigenesis through altered sensitivity to apoptotic signals in breast cancer cells.

Keywords:
RNA splicing Biology Carcinogenesis Exon Alternative splicing RNA-binding protein Intron SR protein Cancer research Ribonucleoprotein Molecular biology Gene RNA Genetics

Metrics

79
Cited By
4.02
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
51
Refs
0.95
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

RNA Research and Splicing
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Cancer Research
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