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ADAR-Mediated RNA Editing Predicts Progression and Prognosis of Gastric Cancer

Authors
 Tim Hon Man Chan  ;  Aditi Qamra  ;  Kar Tong Tan  ;  Jing Guo  ;  Henry Yang  ;  Lihua Qi  ;  Jaymie Siqi Lin  ;  Vanessa Hui En Ng  ;  Yangyang Song  ;  Huiqi Hong  ;  Su Ting Tay  ;  Yujing Liu  ;  Jeeyun Lee  ;  Sun Yong Rha  ;  Feng Zhu  ;  Jimmy Bok Yan So  ;  Bin Tean Teh  ;  Khay Guan Yeoh  ;  Steve Rozen  ;  Daniel G. Tenen  ;  Patrick Tan  ;  Leilei Chen 
Citation
 GASTROENTEROLOGY, Vol.151(4) : 637-650, 2016 
Journal Title
GASTROENTEROLOGY
ISSN
 0016-5085 
Issue Date
2016
MeSH
Adenosine Deaminase/genetics* ; Codon ; Disease Progression ; Epigenesis, Genetic ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Prognosis ; RNA Editing* ; RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics* ; Sequence Analysis, RNA ; Sialoglycoproteins/genetics ; Stomach Neoplasms/genetics* ; Stomach Neoplasms/pathology ; Transcriptome
Keywords
ADARs ; Editome ; RNA Editing ; Transcriptome
Abstract
BACKGROUD & AIMS: Gastric cancer (GC) is the third leading cause of global cancer mortality. Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is a recently described novel epigenetic mechanism involving sequence alterations at the RNA but not DNA level, primarily mediated by ADAR (adenosine deaminase that act on RNA) enzymes. Emerging evidence suggests a role for RNA editing and ADARs in cancer, however, the relationship between RNA editing and GC development and progression remains unknown.

METHODS: In this study, we leveraged on the next-generation sequencing transcriptomics to demarcate the GC RNA editing landscape and the role of ADARs in this deadly malignancy.

RESULTS: Relative to normal gastric tissues, almost all GCs displayed a clear RNA misediting phenotype with ADAR1/2 dysregulation arising from the genomic gain and loss of the ADAR1 and ADAR2 gene in primary GCs, respectively. Clinically, patients with GCs exhibiting ADAR1/2 imbalance demonstrated extremely poor prognoses in multiple independent cohorts. Functionally, we demonstrate in vitro and in vivo that ADAR-mediated RNA misediting is closely associated with GC pathogenesis, with ADAR1 and ADAR2 playing reciprocal oncogenic and tumor suppressive roles through their catalytic deaminase domains, respectively. Using an exemplary target gene PODXL (podocalyxin-like), we demonstrate that the ADAR2-regulated recoding editing at codon 241 (His to Arg) confers a loss-of-function phenotype that neutralizes the tumorigenic ability of the unedited PODXL.

CONCLUSIONS: Our study highlights a major role for RNA editing in GC disease and progression, an observation potentially missed by previous next-generation sequencing analyses of GC focused on DNA alterations alone. Our findings also suggest new GC therapeutic opportunities through ADAR1 enzymatic inhibition or the potential restoration of ADAR2 activity.
Full Text
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016508516347151?via%3Dihub
DOI
10.1053/j.gastro.2016.06.043
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Rha, Sun Young(라선영) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2512-4531
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/152273
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