Malignancy-associated gene network regulated by an RNA binding protein

If he ever gives a TED talk, Jeremy Sanford may have to come up with a better name for the protein he's been studying, which appears to play an important role in driving the proliferation and metastasis of cancer cells. For now, it's known as IGF2BP3, which stands for "insulin-like growth factor 2 mRNA binding protein 3."

IGF2BP3 is normally active in fetal tissue and undetectable in most adult tissue. But production of the protein is reactivated in many types of aggressive cancer, and it is associated with poor prognosis in both solid tumors and leukemias. New findings from Sanford's lab at UC Santa Cruz, where he is an associate professor of molecular, cell, and developmental biology, point toward a possible mechanism by which this protein drives metastasis.

In a study published May 19 in Cell Reports, Sanford and his collaborators identified an extensive malignancy-associated gene expression circuit regulated by IGF2BP3 in pancreatic cancer cells. "We haven't nailed down the details of the interactions, but it suggests a mechanism for how IGF2BP3 could drive metastasis by influencing the expression of genes involved in cancer biology," Sanford said.

pic In pancreatic cancer cells, loss of IGF2BP3 reduced cell invasiveness and other factors associated with tumor progression and metastasis. In these images, immunostaining of control and IGF2BP3-depleted pancreatic cancer cells shows remodeling of focal adhesion complexes (red is focal adhesion kinase; green is IGF2BP3; blue is nucleic acids). Credit: Jeremy Sanford

Gene expression involves several steps, and regulation can occur at different steps in the process. When a protein-coding gene is turned on, its DNA sequence gets copied into a messenger RNA molecule, which is then translated into a protein that carries out a specific function. Many regulatory factors control which genes get transcribed into messenger RNA and when. Less well understood are RNA binding proteins, such as IGF2BP3, which interact with the messenger RNA itself to regulate gene expression after transcription has occurred.

In the new study, Sanford's team identified a set of 164 messenger RNA targets regulated by IGF2BP3 in pancreatic cancer cells. They found that most of the targeted RNAs encode proteins that have some role in cancer biology, such as cell migration, proliferation, and adhesion.

IGF2BP3 had different effects on different targets, increasing the expression of some proteins and decreasing others. This dual activity may depend on how the protein interacts with an important gene-silencing pathway mediated by short pieces of RNA called microRNAs. MicroRNAs can help silence gene expression by binding to messenger RNA as part of a complex known as the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC).

"It's basically a little molecular machine with a guidance system made of microRNA, and it silences genes by blocking translation of the messenger RNA," Sanford said. "When we mapped the positions where IGF2BP3 interacts, we noticed that many of them overlap with binding sites for RISC."

In some cases, IGF2BP3 may compete with microRNAs for binding sites on the messenger RNA, thereby interfering with the silencing complex. In other cases, IGF2BP3 appears to enhance the function of the RISC complex.

"We don't know the exact mechanism of how the IGF2BP3 protein interacts with the RISC complex, but it gives us a lot to investigate in terms of this interesting network of interactions," Sanford said. "It also suggests that therapeutic approaches to interfere with the interactions between IGF2BP3 and its targets might be effective to decrease the aggressiveness of certain tumors."

source: University of California - Santa Cruz