Analysis of cellular and molecular antitumor effects upon inhibition of SATB1 in glioblastoma cells

A Frömberg, M Rabe, H Oppermann, F Gaunitz… - BMC cancer, 2017 - Springer
A Frömberg, M Rabe, H Oppermann, F Gaunitz, A Aigner
BMC cancer, 2017Springer
Abstract Background The Special AT-rich Sequence Binding Protein 1 (SATB1) regulates
the expression of many genes by acting as a global chromatin organizer. While in many
tumor entities SATB1 overexpression has been observed and connected to pro-tumorigenic
processes, somewhat contradictory evidence exists in brain tumors with regard to SATB1
overexpression in glioblastoma and its association with poorer prognosis and tumor
progression. On the functional side, initial data indicate that SATB1 may be involved in …
Background
The Special AT-rich Sequence Binding Protein 1 (SATB1) regulates the expression of many genes by acting as a global chromatin organizer. While in many tumor entities SATB1 overexpression has been observed and connected to pro-tumorigenic processes, somewhat contradictory evidence exists in brain tumors with regard to SATB1 overexpression in glioblastoma and its association with poorer prognosis and tumor progression. On the functional side, initial data indicate that SATB1 may be involved in several tumor cell-relevant processes.
Methods
For the detailed analysis of the functional relevance and possible therapeutic potential of SATB1 inhibition, we employ transient siRNA-mediated knockdown and comprehensively analyze the cellular and molecular role of SATB1 in glioblastoma.
Results
In various cell lines with different SATB1 expression levels, a SATB1 gene dose-dependent inhibition of anchorage-dependent and –independent proliferation is observed. This is due to cell cycle-inhibitory and pro-apoptotic effects of SATB1 knockdown. Molecular analyses reveal SATB1 knockdown effects on multiple important (proto-) oncogenes, including Myc, Bcl-2, Pim-1, EGFR, β-catenin and Survivin. Molecules involved in cell cycle, EMT and cell adhesion are affected as well. The putative therapeutic relevance of SATB1 inhibition is further supported in an in vivo tumor xenograft mouse model, where the treatment with polymeric nanoparticles containing SATB1-specific siRNAs exerts antitumor effects.
Conclusion
Our results demonstrate that SATB1 may represent a promising target molecule in glioblastoma therapy whose inhibition or knockdown affects multiple crucial pathways.
Springer
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