ATDC/TRIM29 drives invasive bladder cancer formation through microRNA-mediated and epigenetic mechanisms.
By: Phillip L Palmbos, Lidong Wang, Huibin Yang, Yin Wang, Jacob Leflein, McKenzie L Ahmet, John E Wilkinson, Chandan Kumar-Sinha, Gina Ney, Scott A Tomlins, Stephanie D Daignault, Lakshmi P Kunju, Xue-Ru Wu, Yair Lotan, Monica Liebert, Mats Ljungman, Diane M Simeone

Internal Medicine, University of Michigan.
2015-9-03; doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-15-0603
Abstract

Bladder cancer is a common and deadly malignancy but its treatment has advanced little due to poor understanding of the factors and pathways that promote disease. ATDC/TRIM29 is a highly expressed gene in several lethal tumor types, including bladder tumors, but its role as a pathogenic driver has not been established. Here we show that overexpression of ATDC in vivo is sufficient to drive both non-invasive and invasive bladder carcinoma development in transgenic mice. ATDC-driven bladder tumors were indistinguishable from human bladder cancers, which displayed similar gene expression signatures. Clinically, ATDC was highly expressed in bladder tumors in a manner associated with invasive growth behaviors. Mechanistically, ATDC exerted its oncogenic effects by suppressing miR-29 and subsequent upregulation of DNMT3A, leading to DNA methylation and silencing of the tumor suppressor PTEN. Taken together, our findings established a role for ATDC as a robust pathogenic driver of bladder cancer development, identified downstream effector pathways and implicated ATDC as a candidate biomarker and therapeutic target.



Copyright © 2015, American Association for Cancer Research.

PMID:26471361






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