NBPF1, a tumor suppressor candidate in neuroblastoma, exerts growth inhibitory effects by inducing a G1 cell cycle arrest
Vanessa Andries,Karl Vandepoele,Karl Vandepoele,Katrien Staes,Geert Berx,Pieter Bogaert,Gert Van Isterdael,Daisy Ginneberge,Eef Parthoens,Jonathan Vandenbussche,Kris Gevaert,Frans van Roy +11 more
TL;DR: It is shown that NBPF is expressed in the non-proliferative suprabasal layers of squamous stratified epithelia of human skin and cervix and exerted different tumor suppressive effects, depending on the cell line analyzed, and provide new clues into the molecular mechanism of the enigmatic NBPf proteins.
read more
Abstract: NBPF1 (Neuroblastoma Breakpoint Family, member 1) was originally identified in a neuroblastoma patient on the basis of its disruption by a chromosomal translocation t(1;17)(p36.2;q11.2). Considering this genetic defect and the frequent genomic alterations of the NBPF1 locus in several cancer types, we hypothesized that NBPF1 is a tumor suppressor. Decreased expression of NBPF1 in neuroblastoma cell lines with loss of 1p36 heterozygosity and the marked decrease of anchorage-independent clonal growth of DLD1 colorectal carcinoma cells with induced NBPF1 expression further suggest that NBPF1 functions as tumor suppressor. However, little is known about the mechanisms involved. Expression of NBPF was analyzed in human skin and human cervix by immunohistochemistry. The effects of NBPF1 on the cell cycle were evaluated by flow cytometry. We investigated by real-time quantitative RT-PCR the expression profile of a panel of genes important in cell cycle regulation. Protein levels of CDKN1A-encoded p21CIP1/WAF1 were determined by western blotting and the importance of p53 was shown by immunofluorescence and by a loss-of-function approach. LC-MS/MS analysis was used to investigate the proteome of DLD1 colon cancer cells with induced NBPF1 expression. Possible biological interactions between the differentially regulated proteins were investigated with the Ingenuity Pathway Analysis tool. We show that NBPF is expressed in the non-proliferative suprabasal layers of squamous stratified epithelia of human skin and cervix. Forced expression of NBPF1 in HEK293T cells resulted in a G1 cell cycle arrest that was accompanied by upregulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21CIP1/WAF1 in a p53-dependent manner. Additionally, forced expression of NBPF1 in two p53-mutant neuroblastoma cell lines also resulted in a G1 cell cycle arrest and CDKN1A upregulation. However, CDKN1A upregulation by NBPF1 was not observed in the DLD1 cells, which demonstrates that NBPF1 exerts cell-specific effects. In addition, proteome analysis of NBPF1-overexpressing DLD1 cells identified 32 differentially expressed proteins, of which several are implicated in carcinogenesis. We demonstrated that NBPF1 exerts different tumor suppressive effects, depending on the cell line analyzed, and provide new clues into the molecular mechanism of the enigmatic NBPF proteins.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Mutational Landscape and Patterns of Clonal Evolution in Relapsed Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Esmé Waanders,Esmé Waanders,Zhaohui Gu,Stephanie M. Dobson,Stephanie M. Dobson,Željko Antić,Jeremy Chase Crawford,Xiaotu Ma,Michael N. Edmonson,Debbie Payne-Turner,Maartje van der Vorst,Marjolijn C.J. Jongmans,Irina McGuire,Xin Zhou,Jian Wang,Lei Shi,Stanley Pounds,Deqing Pei,Cheng Cheng,Guangchun Song,Yiping Fan,Ying Shao,Michael Rusch,Kelly McCastlain,Jiangyan Yu,Ruben van Boxtel,Francis Blokzijl,Ilaria Iacobucci,Kathryn G. Roberts,Ji Wen,Gang Wu,Jing Ma,John Easton,Geoffrey Neale,Scott R. Olsen,Kim E. Nichols,Ching-Hon Pui,Jinghui Zhang,William E. Evans,Mary V. Relling,Jun J. Yang,Paul G. Thomas,John E. Dick,John E. Dick,Roland P. Kuiper,Charles G. Mullighan +45 more
- 10 Jan 2020
TL;DR: A subset of leukemias prone to repeated relapse exhibited hypermutation driven by at least three distinct mutational processes, resulting in heightened neoepitope burden and potential vulnerability to immunotherapy, providing a genomic framework to anticipate and circumvent relapse by earlier detection and targeting of relapse-fated clones.
Characterizing polymorphic inversions in human genomes by single-cell sequencing
Ashley D. Sanders,Mark Hills,David Porubský,Victor Guryev,Ester Falconer,Peter M. Lansdorp,Peter M. Lansdorp,Peter M. Lansdorp +7 more
TL;DR: This work coupled single-cell sequencing of DNA template strands (Strand-seq) with custom analysis software to rapidly discover, map, and genotype genomic rearrangements at high resolution, and built a nonredundant global reference of structural rearrangement in the human genome.
Genetic susceptibility to neuroblastoma: current knowledge and future directions.
TL;DR: The contemporary understanding of neuroblastoma’s genetic predisposition is detailed, including recent advances and ongoing efforts to address gaps in knowledge regarding this malignancy's complex genetic underpinnings are discussed.
iCopyDAV: Integrated platform for copy number variations—Detection, annotation and visualization
TL;DR: The effect of sequencing coverage, read length, bin size, data pre-treatment and segmentation approaches on accurate detection of the complete spectrum of CNVs is shown.
Effect of Ag nanoparticles on viability of MCF-7 and Vero cell lines and gene expression of apoptotic genes
TL;DR: In this article, the authors suggest the nanoparticles as an alternative therapy for the available therapies through detecting the cytotoxic effect of Ag nanoparticles against cancer and normal cell lines and how they affect the apoptotic function and the genes involved.
41
References
The hallmarks of cancer.
TL;DR: This work has been supported by the Department of the Army and the National Institutes of Health, and the author acknowledges the support and encouragement of the National Cancer Institute.
30.6K
Accurate normalization of real-time quantitative RT-PCR data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes
Jo Vandesompele,Katleen De Preter,Filip Pattyn,Bruce Poppe,Nadine Van Roy,Anne De Paepe,Franki Speleman +6 more
TL;DR: The normalization strategy presented here is a prerequisite for accurate RT-PCR expression profiling, which opens up the possibility of studying the biological relevance of small expression differences.
WAF1, a potential mediator of p53 tumor suppression
Wafik S. El-Deiry,Takashi Tokino,Victor E. Velculescu,Daniel B. Levy,Ramon Parsons,Jeffrey M. Trent,D Lin,W. Edward Mercer,Kenneth W. Kinzler,Bert Vogelstein +9 more
TL;DR: A gene is identified, named WAF1, whose induction was associated with wild-type but not mutant p53 gene expression in a human brain tumor cell line and that could be an important mediator of p53-dependent tumor growth suppression.
8.8K
•Journal Article
p21 is necessary for the p53-mediated G1 arrest in human cancer cells.
TL;DR: Results unambiguously establish p21 as a critical mediator of one well-documented p53 function and have important implications for understanding cell cycle checkpoints and the mechanism(s) through which p53 inhibits human neoplasia.
1.2K
Scratching the surface of skin development
TL;DR: How adult skin epithelia maintain populations of stem cells for use in the natural cycles of hair follicle regeneration and for re-epithelialization in response to wounding is focused on.
995