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Splicing factor BUD31 promotes ovarian cancer progression through sustaining the expression of anti-apoptotic BCL2L12.

Nature communications (2022-10-22)
Zixiang Wang, Shourong Wang, Junchao Qin, Xiyu Zhang, Gang Lu, Hongbin Liu, Haiyang Guo, Ligang Wu, Victoria O Shender, Changshun Shao, Beihua Kong, Zhaojian Liu
RÉSUMÉ

Dysregulated expression of splicing factors has important roles in cancer development and progression. However, it remains a challenge to identify the cancer-specific splicing variants. Here we demonstrate that spliceosome component BUD31 is increased in ovarian cancer, and its higher expression predicts worse prognosis. We characterize the BUD31-binding motif and find that BUD31 preferentially binds exon-intron regions near splicing sites. Further analysis reveals that BUD31 inhibition results in extensive exon skipping and a reduced production of long isoforms containing full coding sequence. In particular, we identify BCL2L12, an anti-apoptotic BCL2 family member, as one of the functional splicing targets of BUD31. BUD31 stimulates the inclusion of exon 3 to generate full-length BCL2L12 and promotes ovarian cancer progression. Knockdown of BUD31 or splice-switching antisense oligonucleotide treatment promotes exon 3 skipping and results in a truncated isoform of BCL2L12 that undergoes nonsense-mediated mRNA decay, and the cells subsequently undergo apoptosis. Our findings reveal BUD31-regulated exon inclusion as a critical factor for ovarian cancer cell survival and cancer progression.

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Lignée de cellules épithéliales de la surface ovarienne de souris ID8, ID8 mouse ovarian surface epithelial cell line is frequently used as a syngeneic mouse model for human ovarian cancer.