Molecular Oncology (Dec 2021)

The lncRNA ‘UCA1’ modulates the response to chemotherapy of ovarian cancer through direct binding to miR‐27a‐5p and control of UBE2N levels

  • Anaïs Wambecke,
  • Mohammad Ahmad,
  • Pierre‐Marie Morice,
  • Bernard Lambert,
  • Louis‐Bastien Weiswald,
  • Mégane Vernon,
  • Nicolas Vigneron,
  • Edwige Abeilard,
  • Emilie Brotin,
  • Martin Figeac,
  • Pascal Gauduchon,
  • Laurent Poulain,
  • Christophe Denoyelle,
  • Matthieu Meryet‐Figuiere

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13045
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
pp. 3659 – 3678

Abstract

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Ovarian cancer (OC) is the leading cause of death in patients with gynecologic cancers. Due to late diagnosis and resistance to chemotherapy, the 5‐year survival rate in patients with OC is below 40%. We observed that UCA1, a lncRNA previously reported to play an oncogenic role in several malignancies, is overexpressed in the chemoresistant OC cell line OAW42‐R compared to their chemotherapy‐sensitive counterpart OAW42. Additionally, UCA1 overexpression was related to poor prognosis in two independent patient cohorts. Currently, the molecular mechanisms through which UCA1 acts in OC are poorly understood. We demonstrated that downregulation of the short isoform of UCA1 sensitized OC cells to cisplatin and that UCA1 acted as competing endogenous RNA to miR‐27a‐5p. Upon UCA1 downregulation, miR‐27a‐5p downregulated its direct target UBE2N leading to the upregulation of BIM, a proapoptotic protein of the Bcl2 family. The upregulation of BIM is the event responsible for the sensitization of OC cells to cisplatin. In order to model response to therapy in patients with OC, we used several patient‐derived organoid cultures, a model faithfully mimicking patient’s response to therapy. Inhibition of UBE2N sensitized patient‐derived organoids to platinum salts. In conclusion, response to treatment in patients with OC is regulated by the UCA1/miR‐27a‐5p/UBE2N axis, where UBE2N inhibition could potentially represent a novel therapeutic strategy to counter chemoresistance in OC.

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