LincRNA-p21 suppresses glutamine catabolism and bladder cancer cell growth through inhibiting glutaminase expression

Qun Zhou(Anhui Medical University), Hengji Zhan(Shenzhen University), Fan Lin(Shenzhen University), Yuhan Liu(Shenzhen University), Kang Yang(Shenzhen University), Qunjun Gao(Shenzhen University), Mengting Ding(Anhui Medical University), Yuchen Liu(Shenzhen University), Weiren Huang(Shenzhen University), Zhiming Cai(Shenzhen University)
Bioscience Reports
March 22, 2019
Cited by 33Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Long intergenic non-coding RNA p21 (lincRNA-p21) is down-regulated in some solid tumors. Glutamine catabolism plays an important role in cancer development. However, the role of lincRNA-p21 and its association with glutamine catabolism remain unknown in bladder cancer (BC). In the present study, we investigated the involvement of lincRNA-p21 and glutamine catabolism in BC cell growth and found that ectopic linRNA-p21 expression reduced the proliferation and growth of BIU87 and 5637 cells. Opposite results were observed in lincRNA-p21 silenced J82 and T24 cells. The expression of glutaminase (GLS), intracellular level of glutamate and α-Ketoglutarate (α-KG) were negatively regulated by lincRNA-p21. GLS overexpression reversed the suppressive function of lincRNA-p21 on BC cell growth and proliferation. In contrast, GLS reduction by siRNA blunted the viability of lincRNA-p21 lowly expressed BC cells. Furthermore, lincRNA-p21 and GLS abundance dictated the sensitivity of BC cells to bis-2-(5-phenylacetamido-1,2,4-thiadiazol-2-yl)ethyl sulfide (BPTES) treatment. Importantly, reduced lincRNA-p21 expression and increased GLS mRNA level were observed in BC tissues compared with the normal tissues. Our results demonstrate that lincRNA-p21 suppresses the BC cell growth through inhibiting GLS and glutamine catabolism. Targeting this cascade may be a promising treatment strategy for BC patients.


Related Papers