The Noncoding RNA <i>MALAT1</i> Is a Critical Regulator of the Metastasis Phenotype of Lung Cancer Cells

Tony Gutschner(German Cancer Research Center), Monika Hämmerle(German Cancer Research Center), Moritz F. Eissmann(German Cancer Research Center), Jeff Hsu(German Cancer Research Center), Youngsoo Kim(German Cancer Research Center), Gene Hung(German Cancer Research Center), Alexey S. Revenko(German Cancer Research Center), Gayatri Arun(German Cancer Research Center), Marion Stentrup(German Cancer Research Center), Matthias Groß(German Cancer Research Center), Martin Zörnig(German Cancer Research Center), A. Robert MacLeod(German Cancer Research Center), David L. Spector(German Cancer Research Center), Sven Diederichs(German Cancer Research Center)
Cancer Research
December 15, 2012
Cited by 1,568

Abstract

The long noncoding RNA MALAT1 (metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1), also known as MALAT-1 or NEAT2 (nuclear-enriched abundant transcript 2), is a highly conserved nuclear noncoding RNA (ncRNA) and a predictive marker for metastasis development in lung cancer. To uncover its functional importance, we developed a MALAT1 knockout model in human lung tumor cells by genomically integrating RNA destabilizing elements using zinc finger nucleases. The achieved 1,000-fold MALAT1 silencing provides a unique loss-of-function model. Proposed mechanisms of action include regulation of splicing or gene expression. In lung cancer, MALAT1 does not alter alternative splicing but actively regulates gene expression including a set of metastasis-associated genes. Consequently, MALAT1-deficient cells are impaired in migration and form fewer tumor nodules in a mouse xenograft. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASO) blocking MALAT1 prevent metastasis formation after tumor implantation. Thus, targeting MALAT1 with ASOs provides a potential therapeutic approach to prevent lung cancer metastasis with this ncRNA serving as both predictive marker and therapeutic target. Finally, regulating gene expression, but not alternative splicing, is the critical function of MALAT1 in lung cancer metastasis. In summary, 10 years after the discovery of the lncRNA MALAT1 as a biomarker for lung cancer metastasis, our loss-of-function model unravels the active function of MALAT1 as a regulator of gene expression governing hallmarks of lung cancer metastasis.


Related Papers