4.5 Article

FAM111B, a direct target of p53, promotes the malignant process of lung adenocarcinoma

Journal

ONCOTARGETS AND THERAPY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages 2829-2842

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S190934

Keywords

apoptosis; p53; BAG3; FAM111B; lung adenocarcinoma; oncogene

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81672869]
  2. Jiangsu Provincial Special Program of Medical Science Funding [BL2012030]
  3. Jiangsu Provincial Science Foundation [BK20161596]
  4. Jiangsu Provincial Medical Outstanding Talent
  5. Jiangsu Provincial Medical Youth Talent [QNRC2016657]

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Purpose: Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) is a main subtype of lung cancer, which is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths. The five-year survival rates of lung cancer patients are still comparatively low. Therefore, potential therapeutic targets are urgently needed to improve the survival of lung cancer patients. In this study, we identified FAM111B as an oncogene and potential therapeutic target for LUAD. Methods: The TCGA database and tissue microarray analysis were used to compare the expression of FAM111B in tumor tissue and normal tissues and evaluate the relationship between FAM111B expression and clinical survival. FAM111B was knocked down and overexpressed to observe whether FAM111B could affect the proliferation, migration, cell cycle, and apoptosis of LUAD cells in vivo and in vitro. Results: FAM111B was highly expressed in tumor tissues compared with normal tissues (P<0.01). LUAD patients with hyper-expression of FAM111B had a lower recurrence-free survival (P<0.01) and shorter overall survival (P<0.01). Knocking down FAM111B inhibited cell proliferation, migration and invasion in vitro and tumor growth in vivo. Silencing FAM111B could arrest LUAD cells at G2/M phase and increase apoptosis. Overexpression of FAM111B promoted the growth of lung cancer cells. FAM111B was identified as a direct target of p53 in existing researches by chip-seq analysis. Bioinformatics analysis predicted that FAM111B could directly bind to BAG3 (BCL2 associated athanogene 3). When FAM111B was down-regulated, both expression of BAG 3 and BCL2 were significantly reduced, whereas decreasing the expression of BAG3 had no effect on FAM111B. Conclusions: Our study indicated that FAM111B might be an oncogene and potential therapeutic target in LUAD which could be involved in the regulation of tumor cells by p53 signaling pathway and play an important role in the process of cell cycle and apoptosis by influencing the expression of BAG3 and BCL2.

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