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  • Transcriptional-translational conflict is a barrier to cellular transformation and cancer progression.

Transcriptional-translational conflict is a barrier to cellular transformation and cancer progression.

Cancer cell (2023-04-22)
Sujata Jana, Sandipan Brahma, Sonali Arora, Cynthia L Wladyka, Patrick Hoang, Steven Blinka, Rowan Hough, Jessie L Horn, Yuzhen Liu, Li-Jie Wang, Philippe Depeille, Eric Smith, Robert B Montgomery, John K Lee, Michael C Haffner, Funda Vakar-Lopez, Petros Grivas, Jonathan L Wright, Hung-Ming Lam, Peter C Black, Jeroen P Roose, Alexey G Ryazanov, Arvind R Subramaniam, Steven Henikoff, Andrew C Hsieh
ABSTRACT

We uncover a tumor-suppressive process in urothelium called transcriptional-translational conflict caused by deregulation of the central chromatin remodeling component ARID1A. Loss of Arid1a triggers an increase in a nexus of pro-proliferation transcripts, but a simultaneous inhibition of the eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF2), which results in tumor suppression. Resolution of this conflict through enhancing translation elongation speed enables the efficient and precise synthesis of a network of poised mRNAs resulting in uncontrolled proliferation, clonogenic growth, and bladder cancer progression. We observe a similar phenomenon in patients with ARID1A-low tumors, which also exhibit increased translation elongation activity through eEF2. These findings have important clinical implications because ARID1A-deficient, but not ARID1A-proficient, tumors are sensitive to pharmacologic inhibition of protein synthesis. These discoveries reveal an oncogenic stress created by transcriptional-translational conflict and provide a unified gene expression model that unveils the importance of the crosstalk between transcription and translation in promoting cancer.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Roche
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