The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Mar 2023)

CRISPR/Cas9 screen uncovers functional translation of cryptic lncRNA-encoded open reading frames in human cancer

  • Caishang Zheng,
  • Yanjun Wei,
  • Peng Zhang,
  • Longyong Xu,
  • Zhenzhen Zhang,
  • Kangyu Lin,
  • Jiakai Hou,
  • Xiangdong Lv,
  • Yao Ding,
  • Yulun Chiu,
  • Antrix Jain,
  • Nelufa Islam,
  • Anna Malovannaya,
  • Yun Wu,
  • Feng Ding,
  • Han Xu,
  • Ming Sun,
  • Xi Chen,
  • Yiwen Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 133, no. 5

Abstract

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Emerging evidence suggests that cryptic translation within long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) may produce novel proteins with important developmental/physiological functions. However, the role of this cryptic translation in complex diseases (e.g., cancer) remains elusive. Here, we applied an integrative strategy combining ribosome profiling and CRISPR/Cas9 screening with large-scale analysis of molecular/clinical data for breast cancer (BC) and identified estrogen receptor α–positive (ER+) BC dependency on the cryptic ORFs encoded by lncRNA genes that were upregulated in luminal tumors. We confirmed the in vivo tumor-promoting function of an unannotated protein, GATA3-interacting cryptic protein (GT3-INCP) encoded by LINC00992, the expression of which was associated with poor prognosis in luminal tumors. GTE-INCP was upregulated by estrogen/ER and regulated estrogen-dependent cell growth. Mechanistically, GT3-INCP interacted with GATA3, a master transcription factor key to mammary gland development/BC cell proliferation, and coregulated a gene expression program that involved many BC susceptibility/risk genes and impacted estrogen response/cell proliferation. GT3-INCP/GATA3 bound to common cis regulatory elements and upregulated the expression of the tumor-promoting and estrogen-regulated BC susceptibility/risk genes MYB and PDZK1. Our study indicates that cryptic lncRNA-encoded proteins can be an important integrated component of the master transcriptional regulatory network driving aberrant transcription in cancer, and suggests that the “hidden” lncRNA-encoded proteome might be a new space for therapeutic target discovery.

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