Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research (May 2023)

Epigenetically silenced lncRNA SNAI3-AS1 promotes ferroptosis in glioma via perturbing the m6A-dependent recognition of Nrf2 mRNA mediated by SND1

  • Jianglin Zheng,
  • Qing Zhang,
  • Zhen Zhao,
  • Yue Qiu,
  • Yujie Zhou,
  • Zhipeng Wu,
  • Cheng Jiang,
  • Xuan Wang,
  • Xiaobing Jiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13046-023-02684-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Background Ferroptosis has been linked to tumor progression and resistance to antineoplastic therapy. Long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) exerts a regulatory role in various biological processes of tumor cells, while the function and molecular mechanism of lncRNA in ferroptosis are yet to be clarified in glioma. Methods Both gain-of-function and loss-of-function experiments were employed to investigate the effects of SNAI3-AS1 on the tumorigenesis and ferroptosis susceptibility of glioma in vitro and in vivo. Bioinformatics analysis, Bisulfite sequencing PCR, RNA pull-down, RIP, MeRIP and dual-luciferase reporter assay were performed to explore the low expression mechanism of SNAI3-AS1 and the downstream mechanism of SNAI3-AS1 in ferroptosis susceptibility of glioma. Results We found that ferroptosis inducer erastin downregulates SNAI3-AS1 expression in glioma by increasing the DNA methylation level of SNAI3-AS1 promoter. SNAI3-AS1 functions as a tumor suppressor in glioma. Importantly, SNAI3-AS1 enhances the anti-tumor activity of erastin by promoting ferroptosis both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, SNAI3-AS1 competitively binds to SND1 and perturbs the m6A-dependent recognition of Nrf2 mRNA 3’UTR by SND1, thereby reducing the mRNA stability of Nrf2. Rescue experiments confirmed that SND1 overexpression and silence can rescue the gain- and loss-of-function ferroptotic phenotypes of SNAI3-AS1, respectively. Conclusions Our findings elucidate the effect and detailed mechanism of SNAI3-AS1/SND1/Nrf2 signalling axis in ferroptosis, and provide a theoretical support for inducing ferroptosis to improve glioma treatment.

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