Abstract
Breast cancer (BC) is a heterogeneous disease, and it is the leading cause of death among women. NORAD and HCG11 are highly similar lncRNAs that present binding sites for PUMILIO proteins. PUMILIO acts on hundreds of mRNA targets, contributing to the modulation of gene expression. We analyzed the expression levels of NORAD and HCG11 in the BC subtypes luminal A (LA) and basal-like (BL), and the regulatory networks associated with these lncRNAs. In the analysis of TCGA cohort (n=329) and Brazilian BC samples (n=44), NORAD was up-regulated in LA while HCG11 was up-regulated in BL subtype. An increased expression of NORAD is associated with reduced disease-free survival in basal-like patients (p = 0.002), which suggests that its prognostic value could be different in specific subtypes. The biological pathways observed for the HCG11 network are linked to the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; while NORAD associated pathways appear to be related to luminal epithelial cell transformation. NORAD and HCG11 regulons respectively present 36% and 21.5% of PUMILIO targets, which suggests that these lncRNAs act as a decoy for PUMILIO. These lncRNAs seem to work as players in the differentiation process that drives breast cells to acquire distinct phenotypes related to a specific BC subtype.
Keywords: Breast cancer, lncRNA, NORAD, HCG11, regulon
Introduction
Since the advent of RNA-seq, the possibility to analyze large amounts of transcriptomic data from different types of organisms, tissues and cells generated lots of information thus demanding time and bioinformatics approaches to be better understood. One of the science fields that has significantly benefited from these data is cancer biology. The transcriptome of thousands of patients of different cancer types is now available in databases like The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), and a refined analysis of these data is being performed by researchers around the world.
The expression patterns of a specific class of transcripts named long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA) is drawing attention because of their importance in regulating physiological processes, controlling normal organogenesis, also for playing a role in tumor development (Fatica and Bozzoni, 2014; Yan et al., 2015; Melissari and Grote, 2016; Schmitz et al., 2016). LncRNAs are transcripts larger than 200 nucleotides in length that do not appear to have protein-coding potential, although some of those may produce small functional peptides (Cabili et al., 2011). The knowledge about the role of these molecules in cancer progression is continuously growing. Oncogenic and tumor suppressor activities have been spotted (Beckedorff et al., 2013), but there is information about no more than a few dozens of them (de Oliveira et al., 2019). Studies have found that lncRNA exhibited a tissue-specific pattern of expression greater than protein-coding genes, making them attractive as tissue-specific biomarkers (Cabili et al., 2011; Derrien et al., 2012).
From the public health perspective, breast cancer is one of the most important types of cancer because of the social and economic impact caused by its high incidence (Bray et al., 2018), leading to the need for an urgent development of new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
Breast cancer (BC) can be classified by means of molecular or immunohistochemical approaches. In both cases, the tumors are identified mainly through the expression of estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2), also known as ERBB2. Luminal A subtype express ER and PR does not express HER2; luminal B subtype is ER-positive, PR positive/negative, and HER2 positive/negative; HER2-enriched subtype overexpress HER2 and are ER/PR negative; while the molecular subtype basal-like or its immunohistochemical counterpart triple-negative, does not express either of them (Goldhirsch et al., 2013). Patients with luminal subtypes usually have a better prognosis than those with HER2-enriched or basal-like BC (Feng et al., 2018).
As BC is a heterogeneous disease, the proper classification of the subtypes has allowed for improvement in the treatment of patients, with the use of specific drugs; even though for basal-like (the most aggressive type), there is no specific therapy, which leads to a worse outcome (Tang et al., 2016; Waks and Winer, 2019). In this way, there is an increasing need for new therapeutic targets, and lncRNAs may facilitate both the tumor classification and the identification of other pathways enrolled in breast carcinogenesis, considering the tissue-specific pattern of the expression exhibited by them.
NORAD (non-coding RNA activated by DNA damage) is a lncRNA located on chromosome 20q11.23, containing 5,339 nucleotides, only one exon, and its transcript is preferably located in the cytoplasm. This lncRNA has some particularities such as a high expression (500 -1,000 copies per cell), it is present across tissues and cell lines with comparable levels across most embryonic and adult tissues, and it also presents multiple binding sites for the RNA binding proteins Pumilio (Lee et al., 2016; Tichon et al., 2016).
HCG11 (HLA Complex Group 11) is also a lncRNA that presents 91% of identity to the NORAD sequence (Figure S2). Both NORAD and HCG11 are polyadenylated lncRNAs, and their genes appear to be transcribed from promoters derived from long terminal repeats of retroviruses (Bohn et al., 2018). HCG11 is located on chromosome 6p22.2, it has 5,696 nucleotides, and like NORAD, it has only one exon. The cellular location of this molecule can be either nuclear or cytoplasmic, depending on the cell type (Tichon et al., 2016).
The high identity observed between NORAD and HCG11 lncRNAs keeps the Pumilio Recognition Elements (PRE) distributed along their sequences preserved. Considering the canonical binding sites, there are at least 15 and 16 PRE in NORAD and HCG11, respectively (Figure S2). Pumilio is an RNA binding protein known for repressing gene expression by binding in the 3’ untranslated region of their mRNA targets (Zamore et al., 1997; Wickens et al., 2002). NORAD was described as a regulator of Pumilio, by sequestering it, avoiding the degradation of its targets, but the molecular function of HCG11 has not been reported yet (Tichon et al., 2016).
Despite their similarity, the general expression of HCG11 is approximately 20-fold lower than the NORAD (Tichon et al., 2016), and very little is known about the HCG11 function.
Here we performed a global expression analysis of the lncRNAs NORAD and HCG11 in the most contrasting BC subtypes - luminal A and basal-like, focusing on their regulatory networks, and managing to better distinguish of each distinct phenotype.
Subjects and Methods
TCGA analysis
Information from 329 cases of invasive breast carcinoma (231 luminal A and 98 basal-like) were downloaded through CBioPortal platform (https://www.cbioportal.org). All RNA-seq data and clinical data are available in the TCGA database following ethics, laws, and policies from the program. Large-scale RNA-seq datasets from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) were assessed and analyzed by the open-access web resource “The Atlas of Noncoding RNAs in Cancer” (TANRIC) (Li J et al., 2015). Total RNA-seq data were extracted through XenaBrowser (https://xenabrowser.net/datapages/) of GDC TCGA Breast Cancer (BRCA) project.
Sample collection
Forty-four breast tumor tissue specimens were obtained from patients during a surgical procedure at Hospital Nossa Senhora das Graças, Curitiba (PR), Brazil. The surgical samples are from different tumor types, according to origin, subtype, and location of the tumors. The selection of mammary tumor samples used in the present study was based on the tumor subtype and classified according to immunohistochemistry into four groups: HER2, luminal A, luminal B, and triple-negative (Goldhirsch et al., 2013). All specimens were maintained at RNA later solution (Thermo Fisher) and kept at -80 ºC for long term storage. Clinical and histopathologic characterization of the breast tumor tissue is represented in Table S1.
This study was conducted by the guidelines for research involving human subjects and with the approval by Comissão Nacional de Ética em Pesquisa - CONEP Process No. 09718912.8.0000.0093). All participants signed informed written consent following the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki.
RNA isolation and cDNA synthesis:
Total RNA was isolated from tumor tissues using Total RNA Purification Kit (RNAeasy QIAGEN) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. RNA quantification was performed on a spectrophotometer (Nanodrop Spectrophotometer ND-100, Thermo Scientific, Wilmington, USA). The degree of purity of the preparation was estimated by the relation Abs260nm / Abs280nm, considering, as good purity, a ratio close to 2.0. Samples of cDNA were synthesized from 0.5 μg of tumor RNA using the SuperScript III enzyme (Invitrogen) and random primers, and following the manufacturer’s instructions. To ensure the absence of genomic DNA contaminants in samples, a DNase (QIAGEN) treatment was performed, in addition to a control reaction of cDNA synthesis, without the addition of the enzyme reverse transcriptase according to the manufacturer’s guidelines.
Quantitative real-time PCR
Real-time PCR was performed by using the Viia-7 Sequence Detection Systems (Applied Biosystems). The primer sequences used were as follows NORAD: F: 5’TGATAGGATACATCTTGGACATGGA3’ R: 5’ AACCTAATGAACAAGTCCTGACATACA3’; HCG11: F: 5′- AGGAGTGGTTGCATTTGGGA-3′ R: 5′-CCCACCACGCAGTGAATAG-3’ GUSβ: F: 5’- CCGAGTGAAGATCCCCTTTTTA-3’ R: 5’-GAAAATATGTGGTTGGAGAGCTCATT-3’. PCR was performed in a total volume of 10 μl containing 4.5 μlcDNA template, 5 μl2 X SYBR® Green PCR Master Mix (Applied Biosystems; Darmstadt, Germany), and 0.5 μl of solution that contains forward and reverse primers. The following cycling conditions were used: initial activation at 95 °C for 10 min, denaturation at 95 °C for 15 s, and 60 °C for 60 s. The gene expression was determined by using the 2-ΔΔCt method (Livak and Schmittgen, 2001).
Statistical analysis
An analysis of the Student's t-test was used to examine the NORAD and the HCG11 expression between luminal A and basal-like subtypes.
For the survival analysis, patients were stratified into values below and above the median and the quartiles (P25 and P75). The Kaplan-Meier curves (method) and log-rank tests were used to estimate overall survival, which was calculated to the last follow-up, or death event. Data were analyzed statistically through GraphPad Prism 7 and R Studio software.
Reconstruction of regulons
RNA-seq data from the TCGA cohort was used to reconstruct regulatory networks considering NORAD and HCG11 as the central regulators of the network. The reconstruction was performed through the RTN package (http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/RTN.html). This package provides classes and methods for transcriptional network inference and analysis using conditional mutual information. The list of genes in each regulon is shown in Table S2.
After the reconstruction of the regulons, we investigated their activity in luminal A and basal-like subtypes, by using the RTN Survival Package (http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/RTNsurvival.html). We generated the Differential Enrichment Score (dES) plot to visualize regulon activity in the subtypes, assessing the stratification of a cohort based on the regulon activity. As a result, we have a network of co-expression formulated from the data of mutual information from potential genes positively or negatively modulated, in agreement with HCG11 or NORAD. Enrichment analysis was performed by using FunRich (Version 3.1.3) software (Pathan et al., 2015), to evaluate the biological process involved in each regulon. From data deposited on the MSigDB platform, we extracted molecular signatures for the luminal A and basal-like subtypes (https://www.gsea-msigdb.org/gsea/msigdb). We integrated the data of the reconstructed regulons for NORAD and HCG11 to identify overlaps through" Fisher’s exact test.
Chromatin state analysis
TCGA cohort data from promoter accessibility and methylation were extracted from Xena Browser (Available at https://xenabrowser.net/datapages/?hub=https://atacseq.xenahubs.net:443). In total, there were 18 Luminal A and 15 Basal-like samples. All these samples were the same for promoter accessibility and methylation (Corces et al., 2018).
Promoter accessibility was evaluated through ATAC-seq and methylation using Illumina Human Methylation 450k. The chromatin accessibility information analyzed was made by taking the promoter region as a parameter. For this region, the probe used was BRCA 69522.
All data generated for this study are included in this article (and its supplementary information files).
Results
The lncRNAs NORAD and HCG11 are differentially expressed among breast cancer subtypes
To investigate the expression pattern of NORAD and HCG11 in BC patients, we examined the RNA-seq data from the TCGA datasets on luminal A (n = 231) and basal-like (n = 98) subtypes. NORAD is less expressed in patients that belong to the poorest prognostic subtype basal-like in comparison to luminal A patients (p < 0.001). From the same cohort, analysis of HCG11 expression showed an opposite outcome, and higher levels were observed in basal-like patients (Figure 1A) compared to luminal A patients (P < 0.001). These differences were confirmed in an independent cohort from Brazilian patients classified by immunohistochemistry, including luminal A (n = 21) and triple-negative (n = 23) tumor samples, classified by RT-qPCR (Figure 1B).
The expression regulation of the lncRNAs NORAD and HCG11 seems to be given by different molecular mechanisms
In order to raise more information about NORAD and HCG11 expression regulation, we extracted cohort information about promoter accessibility and methylation from TCGA. As expected for the expression data, HCG11 promoter is significantly more accessible and also less methylated in basal-like patients when compared with the luminal A ones. Similar observations were not found on NORAD promoter. Interestingly, for this lncRNA, there is no difference for promoter accessibility or methylation between the two BC subtypes studied (Figure 1C and 1D).
These results bring evidence that NORAD and HCG11 have different regulation profiles, which may be related to the differential expression profile in BC subtypes.
NORAD expression has an impact on survival in Basal-like breast cancer
Considering the expression differences of NORAD and HCG11 in BC subtypes, we decided to investigate its prognostic value using survival data available from TCGA cohort. The median and quartile values were used as cut-offs for the groups (P25 and P75). Survival analysis for both NORAD and HCG11 in the entire cohort did not show statistically significant differences (Figure S1).
We found that an increased expression of NORAD is associated with reduced disease-free survival only in basal-like patients (P75, p = 0.002), suggesting that the prognostic value of NORAD could be different in specific subtypes. For HCG11, differences in expression do not correlate with overall survival (OS) in neither studied group of patients (Figure 2).
NORAD and HCG11 present independent regulons
After observing that NORAD and HCG11 have a particular expression pattern for each BC subtype, we performed a reconstruction of the transcriptional network based on mutual information and all potential targets using TCGA cohort transcriptomic data. This strategy allowed us to generate the regulons coordinated by these lncRNAs, in BC subtypes and also according to the receptor status (Castro et al., 2016). The networks comprised 145 and 116 genes, respectively, for NORAD and HCG11 regulons (Figure 3B and Table S2). The profile of each regulon focuses on hormone status (ER + and PR +), and it shows a positive activity for NORAD but a negative activity for HCG11. This status is well observed in basal-like samples, where the HCG11 regulon is active while it is inactive in NORAD (Figure 3A).
Molecular signatures for the luminal A and basal-like subtypes were compared with HCG11 and NORAD regulons. This signature showed up and down regulated genes in the molecular subtypes of the disease. No list overlaps were found when comparing the molecular signature of the luminal A subtype to the other regulons analyzed. Through a Fisher’s exact test, we observed a significant relationship between the two classification factors HCG11 and NORAD regulons, and also basal-like genes-up and basal-like genes-down categories (p <0.01).
Interestingly, these two networks do not share common elements (Figure 3B). To better understand the biological processes underneath each regulon, we performed Gene Ontology (GO) analysis with the involved genes. No significant p-values (BH correction) of the enrichment terms were obtained from both GO analyses. Nevertheless, the set of biological pathways observed for the HCG11 network are closely linked to epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a crucial mechanism for malignant phenotype tumor acquiring (Felipe Lima et al., 2016). On the other hand, NORAD associated biological pathways, include BMP and ALK1 signaling, that are related to luminal epithelial cell transformation (Figure 3B)(Chapellier and Maguer-Satta, 2016).
Within the set of genes belonging to the NORAD and HCG11 regulons, a significant portion (36% and 21.5%, respectively), are molecular targets of Pumilio. A differential expression analysis of the PUM1 and PUM2 mRNAs was performed, comparing the luminal A and basal-like samples of the TCGA cohort. No significant difference was observed (p <0.05) when comparing these two subtypes (data not shown). Considering only one (PSMG4), Pumilio targets presented a coordinated expression with NORAD or HCG11 regulons.
Discussion
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease and, based on the molecular profile, can be classified in four main subtypes: luminal A and B, HER2-enriched, and basal-like (Sorlie et al., 2003; Heng et al., 2017). Using high-throughput transcriptome sequencing data from BC patients, we found that in addition to mRNAs, ncRNAs also show a differential expression profile when comparing normal and tumor tissues (Chan and Tay 2018). Differential expressions of many lncRNAs have been associated with BC (de Oliveira et al., 2019; Mathias et al., 2019).
NORAD is a lncRNA with some unusual aspects when compared with other molecules from the same class. It is conserved between organisms (Guttman et al., 2009) and highly expressed in many cell types (Tichon et al., 2016), which suggests an important role in the cell. The relationship between NORAD expression and tumor tissues was previously observed in different types of cancer, in which the poorest prognosis was associated not only when NORAD was up-regulated (Li H et al., 2017; Wu et al., 2017; Huo et al., 2018; Li Q et al., 2018; Zhang et al., 2018) but also when it was downregulated (Hu et al., 2017). HCG11 is a paralog of NORAD, and despite the high similarity between them, the molecular function of HCG11 is still unknown.
Here we investigated the expression profile of NORAD and HCG11 in tumor and non-tumor breast tissue RNA-seq datasets from TCGA, focusing on each breast cancer subtype and also in tumor samples from Brazilian patients.
A study published in 2016 (Liu et al., 2016) looking for lncRNAs as prognostic markers for human breast cancer has associated the poor overall survival (OS) with the expression levels (upregulation) of four lncRNAs, including NORAD (LINC00657) and HCG11. This study has used the same information from TCGA cohort but with no distinctions among the subtypes. In the same study, Liu et al. (2016) observed that NORAD and HCG11 upregulation were significantly associated with OS. When we split breast cancer patients into subtypes and evaluated the expression levels of each lncRNA, we could observe that a higher expression of NORAD was found in luminal subtypes, usually lower-risk patients, in comparison to basal-like, which have a higher risk of relapse. Similar data was seen in two other cohorts from the GSE42568 dataset (n = 104), and National Taiwan University (n = 90) (Tan et al., 2019). HCG11 shows the opposite pattern, with a higher expression in basal-like/triple-negative samples. Corroborating these findings by RT-qPCR, we observed a similar result in Brazilian breast cancer patients, and a recent study with 80 breast cancer patients showed that tumors with up-regulation of HCG11 were mostly ER-negative (Dashti et al., 2020). Those observations reinforce the heterogeneous nature of breast cancer, making it necessary to discriminate each subtype for proper disease evaluation. In this regard, lncRNAs expression studies may help for a better stratification of subtypes.
We also observed a significant relationship between the two regulons and basal-like genes-up as well as basal-like genes-down categories (p <0.01), which suggests their involvement in breast cancer molecular phenotype. The method used to compute the regulons potentially mediated by HCG11 and NORAD was previously used, considering transcription factors. We are proposing here the use of this method to obtain co-expression networks for the lncRNAs in question. Since little is known about the biology of these RNAs, it is hard to make a direct regulation inference; however, we can highlight a group of genes regulated positively or negatively with the lncRNAs in question. By investigating the prognostic significance of these lncRNA expressions in breast cancer subtypes, we found that an increased expression of NORAD is associated with reduced disease-free survival only in basal-like patients (P75, p = 0.002) (Figure 2). In general terms, basal-like phenotype presents a lower expression of NORAD than other subtypes, even though, in this group of patients, those that show a higher expression of NORAD have the poorest prognosis in the 2,000 days after diagnosis. When the overall survival of HCG11 in subtypes was analyzed, we did not find an association with this lncRNA expression. The discrepancy in our results and those made by Liu et al. (2016) may be a consequence of using distinct strategies of analysis. While they used an expression level of HCG11 higher than 2 (exp > 2) to select the patients, we chose for using the median and also the 25th and the 75th percentiles to define high and low expression groups.
As it occurs with protein-coding genes, lncRNAs expressions can be controlled both transcriptionally (Bunch, 2018) and post-transcriptionally (Yamamura et al., 2018). To better understand NORAD and HCG11 regulation, we extracted cohort data of accessibility and methylation status at the lncRNAs promoter sequence from TCGA. The accessibility data was obtained by means of the the assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-seq); and the methylation data were generated by using Illumina Human Methylation 450k.
Considering the HCG11 promoter accessibility, a significative difference between luminal A and basal-like subtypes was observed, being more accessible in the basal-like subtype. In contrast, HCG11 promoter methylation was more evident in luminal A than in basal-like. These results match with the difference observed in the expression level of HCG11 in the subtypes, suggesting regulation at chromatin level of this lncRNA. In contrast, promoter accessibility or methylation differences were not observed in NORAD when luminal A and basal-like subtypes were compared. Even with no differences regarding accessibility, NORAD promoter in cancer samples does not seem exposed. Recently, it has been demonstrated that histone deacetylation and nucleosome occupancy by YAP, TAZ, TEAD, and NuRD complex, are responsible for NORAD expression regulation in breast cancer cell lineage (Tan et al., 2019). The information suggests a different mechanism of gene regulation at transcriptional level for these lncRNAs.
In order to understand the functions of these lncRNAs, analyses of NORAD sequence have shown the presence of multiple binding sites for the conserved RNA binding proteins Pumilio (Pum1/Pum2) (Lee et al., 2016; Tichon et al., 2016) and pull-down assays showed the interaction with RBMX (RNA Binding Motif Protein X-Linked) (Munschauer et al., 2018). The association of NORAD with these proteins reinforces the idea that this lncRNA may act as a scaffold for ribonucleoprotein complexes. As it occurs with NORAD, HCG11 has multiple binding sites for Pum proteins (Bohn et al., 2018). It has been shown that the interaction of NORAD with Pumilio promotes the molecular decoy of these proteins in cancer cells (Tichon et al.,2018; Wang et al., 2018).
Pumilio proteins (PUM) belong to the PUF family of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) that dictate stem cell fate in invertebrates by inhibiting expression/translation of target mRNAs (Wickens et al., 2002). Humans present two paralogs, PUMILIO1 (PUM1) and PUMILIO2 (PUM2), which control sets of functionally related mRNAs that encode proteins involved in angiogenesis, neurogenesis, cell cycle and differentiation. PUM1/2 also contribute to the self-renewal of human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) (Lee et al., 2007; Leeb et al., 2014) and human spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) (Moore et al., 2003) and have been implicated in stem cell physiology by negatively regulating genes involved in cell differentiation (Shigunov et al., 2012; Silva et al., 2020).
The high identity observed between NORAD and HCG11 lncRNAs keeps the Pumilio Recognition Elements (PRE) present in their sequences. We speculate that with the variation in the NORAD and the HCG11 expression, the availability of PUM proteins could vary as well, leading to differences in the expression of the mRNAs regulated by these proteins. To find a relationship among the mRNAs that make up NORAD and HCG11 regulons in BC subtypes and mRNAs regulated by PUMILIO proteins (Galgano et al., 2008), we compared those three groups of RNAs (Figure 3B). When looking at NORAD regulon, we observe that 36% (52 genes) are PUMILIO targets. With only one exception (PSMG4), these genes present a coordinated expression with NORAD. In the HCG11 regulon, 21.5% (25 genes) are PUMILIO targets and all of them have a coordinated expression with HCG11. As suggested before for NORAD (Lee et al., 2016; Tichon et al., 2016), we believe that these lncRNAs are acting as a decoy for PUMILIO, interfering in the expression of their targets in breast cancer.
Based on the paper that identified the NORAD interactome (Munschauer et al., 2018), and observing that a significant portion of the genes present in both regulons are not Pumilio targets, we believe that the expression fluctuations of these lncRNAs also interfere in the assembly of other complexes, thus altering cell metabolism via different mechanisms. For example, in glioma cells, it has been shown that the association of NORAD and AKR1B1 activates the ERK pathway, promoting a malignant phenotype (Luo et al., 2020). In an opposite fashion, NORAD works as a tumor suppressor by binding FUBP1 and promoting cell apoptosis in endometrial cancer (Han et al., 2020). NORAD also serves as a platform for S100P binding, suppressing lung and breast cancer metastasis (Tan et al., 2019).
The regulatory networks controlled by NORAD and HCG11, though showing a set of genes that is not big enough to result in significant functional enrichment, indicate that essential processes in cancer signaling are present. In basal-like carcinomas, dedifferentiation is an important feature, as it leads tumor to become more aggressive (Felipe Lima et al., 2016). The transition from epithelial-to-mesenchymal phenotype (EMT) allows invasion and metastasis (Ye et al., 2017). The main endogenous EMT pathways include TGF-β, Notch, Wnt, Hedgehog, and receptor tyrosine kinases. The exogenous signals come from the extracellular matrix that activates the endogenous pathways (Fedele et al., 2017). HCG11 network is more active in basal-like subtype and includes genes that comprehend pathways related to EMT: TGF-β, glypican signaling, AP1 (Bakiri et al., 2015), suggesting the involvement of this lncRNA in malignant progression. Future studies are needed to understand the mechanisms of such observations.
Even with their great identity, NORAD and HCG11 seem to be involved in distinct cellular processes. The coexistence of two genes highly similar in their sequences, but with different expression patterns and functions, is also seen in coding genes. One example is acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) genes. In humans, they share 53% of identity and a common precursor, but they are differently expressed both temporally and spatially (Massoulié et al., 1993).
Conclusions
Our findings indicate that NORAD and HCG11 are differentially expressed in breast cancer subtypes and participate in distinct regulatory networks. We postulate that these lncRNAs are regulated by specific transcriptional mechanisms, and that they may be essential players in triggering off breast cancer subtypes by regulating mRNAs availability and by acting as a scaffold for RNA-protein complexes in the cell.
Acknowledgments
We are grateful for the patients that agreed to participate in this project. We would like to thank Dr. Mauro Castro for all bioinformatics support. The results shown here are in part based upon data generated by the TCGA Research Network: http://cancergenome.nih.gov/. This study was financed in part by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - Brasil (CAPES) - Finance Code 001, by Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) and Araucaria Foundation.
Supplementary material
The following online material is available for this article:
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