Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Jun 2021)

PCAT-1 facilitates breast cancer progression via binding to RACK1 and enhancing oxygen-independent stability of HIF-1α

  • Jianlong Wang,
  • Xuyi Chen,
  • Haijuan Hu,
  • Mengting Yao,
  • Yanbiao Song,
  • Aimin Yang,
  • Xiuhua Xu,
  • Ning Zhang,
  • Jianzhao Gao,
  • Bin Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24
pp. 310 – 324

Abstract

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Hypoxia induces a series of cellular adaptive responses that enable promotion of inflammation and cancer development. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) is involved in the hypoxia response and cancer promotion, and it accumulates in hypoxia and is degraded under normoxic conditions. Here we identify prostate cancer associated transcript-1 (PCAT-1) as a hypoxia-inducible long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) that regulates HIF-1α stability, crucial for cancer progression. Extensive analyses of clinical data indicate that PCAT-1 is elevated in breast cancer patients and is associated with pathological grade, tumor size, and poor clinical outcomes. Through gain- and loss-of-function experiments, we find that PCAT-1 promotes hypoxia-associated breast cancer progression including growth, migration, invasion, colony formation, and metabolic regulation. Mechanistically, PCAT-1 directly interacts with the receptor of activated protein C kinase-1 (RACK1) protein and prevents RACK1 from binding to HIF-1α, thus protecting HIF-1α from RACK1-induced oxygen-independent degradation. These findings provide new insight into lncRNA-mediated mechanisms for HIF-1α stability and suggest a novel role of PCAT-1 as a potential therapeutic target for breast cancer.

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