International Journal of Cancer, volume 152, issue 7, pages 1452-1462
Adversary of DNA integrity: a long non‐coding RNA stimulates driver oncogenic chromosomal rearrangement in human thyroid cells
Д. Э. Демин
1
,
Matvey Mikhailovich Murashko
1, 2
,
Aksinya Nicolaevna Uvarova
3, 4
,
Elena Yurievna Shyrokova
2, 5
,
Gennady Efimovich Gorlachev
6
,
Andrew Rostislavovich Zaretsky
7
,
Kirill Viktorovich Korneev
1, 3, 8
,
Alina Sergeevna Ustiugova
3
,
Elena Andreevna Tkachenko
1, 4
,
Valentina Vitalevna Kostenko
1, 4
,
Karina Aleksandrovna Tatosyan
9
,
Saveliy Andreevich Sheetikov
4, 8
,
Pavel Vladimirovich Spirin
5
,
Dmitry Vladimirovich Kuprash
3, 4
,
Anton Markovich Schwartz
2, 3
6
GBUZ Moscow Clinical Scientific Center named after Loginov MHD
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-01-16
Journal:
International Journal of Cancer
scimago Q1
SJR: 2.131
CiteScore: 13.4
Impact factor: 5.7
ISSN: 00207136, 10970215
PubMed ID:
36510744
Cancer Research
Oncology
Abstract
The flurry of publications devoted to the functions of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) published in the last decade leaves no doubt about the exceptional importance of lncRNAs in various areas including tumor biology. Contribution of lncRNAs to the early stages of oncogenesis remains poorly understood. In this study we explored a new role for lncRNAs: stimulation of specific chromosomal rearrangements upon DNA damage. We demonstrated that lncRNA CASTL1 (ENSG00000269945) stimulates the formation of the CCDC6-RET inversion (RET/PTC1) in human thyroid cells subjected to radiation or chemical DNA damage. Facilitation of chromosomal rearrangement requires lncRNA to contain regions complementary to the introns of both CCDC6 and RET genes as deletion of these regions deprives CASTL1 of the ability to stimulate the gene fusion. We found that CASTL1 expression is elevated in tumors with CCDC6-RET fusion which is the most frequent rearrangement in papillary thyroid carcinoma. Our results open a new venue for the studies of early oncogenesis in various tumor types, especially those associated with physical or chemical DNA damage. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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