A feed-forward loop between lncARSR and YAP activity promotes expansion of renal tumour-initiating cells

Le Qu(Second Military Medical University), Zhenjie Wu(Second Military Medical University), Yaoming Li(Army Medical University), Zhipeng Xu(Second Military Medical University), Bing Liu(Second Military Medical University), Feng Liu(PLA Navy General Hospital), Yi Bao(Second Military Medical University), Deng-Shuang Wu(Second Military Medical University), Jiayi Liu(Second Military Medical University), Anbang Wang(Second Military Medical University), Xiaoyuan Chu(Nanjing General Hospital of Nanjing Military Command), Ying-hao SUN(Second Military Medical University), Cheng Chen(Nanjing General Hospital of Nanjing Military Command), Zhengyu Zhang(Nanjing General Hospital of Nanjing Military Command), Linhui Wang(Second Military Medical University)
Nature Communications
November 25, 2016
Cited by 112Open Access
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Abstract

Renal tumour-initiating cells (T-ICs) contribute to tumorigenesis, progression and drug resistance of renal cell carcinoma (RCC). However, the underlying mechanism for the propagation of renal T-ICs remains unclear. Here we show that long non-coding RNA lncARSR is upregulated in primary renal T-ICs and associated with a poor prognosis of clear cell RCCs (ccRCC). Knockdown of lncARSR attenuates the self-renewal, tumorigenicity and metastasis of renal T-ICs. Conversely, forced lncARSR expression enhances T-IC properties of RCC cells. Mechanistically, the binding of lncARSR to YAP impedes LATS1-induced YAP phosphorylation and facilitates YAP nuclear translocation. Reciprocally, YAP/TEAD promotes lncARSR transcription, thus forming a feed-forward circuit. The correlation between lncARSR and YAP is validated in a ccRCC cohort, where the combination of these two parameters exhibits improved prognostic accuracy. Our findings indicate that lncARSR plays a critical role in renal T-ICs propagation and may serve as a prognostic biomarker and potential therapeutic target.


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