Oncotarget

Research Papers:

MicroRNA-1908-5p contributes to the oncogenic function of the splicing factor SRSF3

Hye Ree Kim _, Chang Hoon Shin, Hong Lee, Kyung Hee Choi, Do-Hyun Nam, Takbum Ohn and Hyeon Ho Kim

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Oncotarget. 2017; 8:8342-8355. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14184

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Abstract

Hye Ree Kim1, Chang Hoon Shin1, Hong Lee1, Kyung Hee Choi1, Do-Hyun Nam1,2, Takbum Ohn3, Hyeon Ho Kim1,4

1Department of Health Sciences and Technology, Samsung Advanced Institute for Health Sciences and Technology, Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, Republic of Korea

2Department of Neurosurgery, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea

3Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, College of Medicine, Chosun University, Gwangju, Republic of Korea

4Research Institute for Future Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Republic of Korea

Correspondence to:

Hyeon Ho Kim, email: [email protected]

Takbum Ohn, email: [email protected]

Keywords: SRSF3, FADS1, miR-1908-5p, NF-κB, NKIRAS2

Received: August 24, 2016    Accepted: November 22, 2016    Published: December 26, 2016

ABSTRACT

Serine/arginine (SR)-rich proteins that contain RS domains and SR repeats have diverse cellular functions including transcription, polyadenylation, translation, and RNA export. The splicing factor SRSF3, also termed SRp20, is the smallest member of the SR protein family and is a known proto-oncogene. Although it is implicated in the malignant phenotypes of various cancer cells, the molecular mechanism underlying SRSF3-mediated cancer progression is still obscure. We investigated here the oncogenic functions of SRSF3 in osteosarcoma U2OS cells. Knockdown of SRSF3 inhibited proliferation, clonogenicity, and metastatic potential including migration and invasion. It also decreased the level of miR-1908 independent of its host gene FADS1. Although FADS1 was not associated with SRSF3-mediated malignant properties, overexpression of miR-1908-5p increased cell proliferation, migration, and invasion, suggesting that miR-1908-5p is responsible for the oncogenic functions of SRSF3. Knockdown of SRSF3 decreased the expression of miR-1908-5p by inhibiting transactivation of NF-κB. We observed that miR-1908-5p downregulated NF-κB inhibitor interacting Ras-like 2 (NKIRAS2), a negative regulator of the NF-κB pathway by directly binding to the 3’UTR of NKIRAS2 mRNA. Consistent with overexpression of miR-1908-5p, knockdown of NKIRAS2 diminished the expression level of IκB-β and provoked translocation of NF-κB into the nucleus where it transcriptionally activates its target genes including miR-1908-5p expression, thus elevating the proliferation and metastatic potential. Taken together, our results demonstrate that SRSF3 confers the malignant characteristics on cancer cells via the SRSF3/miR-1908-5p/NKIRAS2 axis.


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