Abstract
Background
Epithelial splicing regulatory proteins (ESRPs), including ESRP1 and ESRP2, are important proteins for alternative splicing of mRNAs and are reported to promote or inhibit the progression of some tumors. However, the effects of ESRPs in breast cancer are still unknown.
Material/Methods
In this study, we detected the transcriptional level and alterations of ESRP1 in patients with breast cancer based on the Oncomine, Gene Expression Profiling Interactive Analysis, Gene Expression-Based Outcome for Breast Cancer Online, and cBioPortal databases. Using immunohistochemistry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction, the expression pattern of ESRP1 in breast cancer was analyzed. Analysis of the clinicopathological characteristics and function of ESRP1 in breast cancer were actualized through the University of Alabama Cancer database and Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery. Using the Kaplan-Meier plotter, the prognostic values of ESRP1 in patients with breast cancer were analyzed. The Encyclopedia of RNA Interactomes database was used to predict miRNAs that regulated ESRP1.
Results
We found that ESRP1 was significantly overexpressed in patients with breast cancer, compared with patients without breast cancer, and had statistically significant clinicopathological characteristics. Kaplan-Meier plotter analysis indicated that the elevated expression of ESRP1 was associated with poor prognosis in patients with breast cancer. Furthermore, hsa-miR-181c-5p was identified to be potentially involved in the regulation of ESRP1.
Conclusions
These results suggest that ESRP1 is a valuable target for the precise treatment of breast cancer and a potential biomarker for the prognosis of patients with breast cancer.
Keywords: Biomarkers, Breast Neoplasms, Prognosis
Background
It has been reported that breast cancer (BC), a common type of cancer in women, had a worldwide incidence in 2018 of 11.6% among all cancer types, second only to lung cancer [1]. According to a report in the UK, approximately 31% of women will have BC during their lifetime [2]. BC mortality in countries of Europe and North America has declined since 1990 owing to the development of early diagnostic methods and effective cancer treatments [3]. However, BC mortality is increasing in many Asian, African, and Latin American countries and regions. BC morbidity and mortality are predicted to increase substantially in developing countries, with an estimated 55% and 58% increase, respectively, over the next 20 years [3,4]. At present, the combination of surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy is still the criterion standard for the treatment of BC; however, a series of individualized treatments are being explored [5].
Currently, cancer stem cells are considered to be closely associated with the occurrence and maintenance of multiple cancers [6]. BC stem cells cause the overgrowth of tumor cells and distant metastases, which are involved in the increase in BC-related diseases, recurrence, and mortality. It was reported that the activation of BC stem cells is correlated with the upregulation of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in human epithelial breast cells [6]. EMT is the process of transformation of cells from an epithelial phenotype to a mesenchymal phenotype, which can cause BC epithelial cells to leave the primary niche, metastasize to distant regions, and resist chemotherapy and radiation [7–9]. During this process, epithelial splicing regulatory proteins (ESRPs) play an important role. ESRPs are considered to be epithelial-specific pre-mRNA alternative splicing factors. They are members of the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNP) family of RNA-binding proteins, including ESRP1 and ESRP2, which regulate splicing events associated with epithelial phenotypes [10]. The ESRP protein family regulates EMT-related activities, including cell movement, cytoskeletal dynamics, and intercellular adhesion, which involve other splicing factors [10–12]. Reports suggest that the high expression of ESRP1 can promote the progression of many cancers, including colorectal cancer [13], estrogen (ER)-positive BC [14], and ovarian cancer [15,16]. However, its homologue ESRP2 is described as a tumor suppressor in other malignancies such as prostate cancer [17].
Although the ESRP family has been shown to play important roles in many cancers, its bioinformatics analysis in BC has not been systematically explored. In this study, we systematically analyzed ESRPs based on online databases and demonstrated the expression level, clinicopathological characteristics, functional annotation, and prognostic value of ESRP1 in BC. Our report suggests that ESRP1 is a potential biomarker and precise therapeutic target for BC.
Material and Methods
Oncomine Analysis
The Oncomine [18] database (https://www.oncomine.org/resource/login.html) is related to cancer research and has more than 700 independent datasets, of which some data is publicly available. The Oncomine database can analyze the expression characteristics of gene families and members in different types of cancer. Therefore, we analyzed the expression characteristics of the ESRP family in various subtypes of BC. In this research, the P value was set to 1E-4 and the fold change was set to 2.
Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia Analysis
The Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (CCLE) [19] database (https://portals.broadinstitute.org/ccle) is a public online database containing data from 947 cancer patients’ cell lines, which can be used for genomic data research, copy-number variation studies, and mutation data studies. The expression levels of ESRP1 in different cancer cell lines were detected by CCLE.
Cell Culture and Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction Detection
MCF-7 cells (human BC cells) were acquired from the Shanghai branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and grown in culture medium consisting of RPMI-1640 and 10% fetal bovine serum. MCF-10A cells (human normal breast epithelial tissue cells) were purchased from Shanghai Biotechnology Co., Ltd., enzyme research and grown in culture medium consisting of DMEM/F12 and 5% horse serum, 10 mg/mL insulin, 20 ng/mL EGF, 0.5 mg/mL hydrocortisone, and 100 ng/mL cholera toxin. We also bought reagents from Shanghai Biotechnology Co., Ltd., enzyme research. The cell culture conditions were 37°C and 5% carbon dioxide.
The total RNA of the MCF-7 and MCF-10A cell lines was extracted with a TRIzol™ Plus RNA Purification Kit (Invitrogen, 12183555). RNA was reverse-transcribed into cDNA using a SuperScript™ III First-Strand Synthesis SuperMix kit for reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) (Invitrogen, 11752050). Next, real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) was performed using a SYBR Green qPCR SuperMix-UDG kit (Invitrogen, 11733046). The primers used in qPCR for human ESRP1 (GeneBank accession No. NM--001034915) were forward 5′-CATGTACGTTGCTATCCAGGC-3′ and reverse 5′-CTCCTTAATGTCACGCACGAT-3′ (synthesized by Sangon Tech).
Immunohistochemistry
This research was approved by the Academic Committee of Qingdao University (QYFYWZLL 26028) and was conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. All samples were approved for use in our research.
Immunohistochemistry samples were prepared as follows. The paraffin was removed from the 5-mm paraffin sections. Next, microwave antigen retrieval was performed following routine methods. The sections were treated with 3% H2O2 at room temperature for 10 min to inactivate endogenous enzymes and then were blocked with goat serum for 20 min at room temperature. Next, commercial rabbit polyclonal antibodies against ESRP1 (No. D164372-0025 from Sangon Biotech) were incubated at 1/100 dilution overnight at 4°C. After rinsing sections with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), the goat anti-mouse IgG (IgG/Bio) was incubated for 30 min at 37°C. Next, after rinsing sections with PBS, streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase was incubated at 37°C for 30 min. Lastly, after rinsing sections with PBS, 3,3-diaminobenzidin was used to label the ESRP1-positive tissues for 3 min at room temperature, and hematoxylin was used to label the cell nuclei.
University of Alabama Cancer Database Analysis
The University of Alabama Cancer (UALCAN) [20] database (http://ualcan.path.uab.edu/cgi-bin/TCGAExResultNew2.pl?genenam=ESRP1&ctype=BRCA) is a comprehensive and interactive web resource for analyzing cancer data, which can be used to analyze the expression characteristics of genes in different types of cancer and can be combined with other databases such as The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database. We used the UALCAN database to analyze the expression of ESRP1 in BC samples compared to that of normal tissue samples.
Gene Expression-Based Outcome for Breast Cancer Online Analysis
By uploading the corresponding Affymetrix probes to the Gene Expression-Based Outcome for Breast Cancer Online (GOBO) [21] database (http://co.bmc.lu.se/gobo/gsa.pl), the transcription level of ESRP1 was analyzed. The GOBO Gene Set Analysis Tumors module allows a user to investigate the expression pattern of single genes or sets of genes across a large set of BCs analyzed by Affymetrix U133A arrays. The tumor dataset consists of 1881 samples with the following characteristics: All tumors (n=1881), ER-positive tumors (n=1225), ER-negative (n=395), untreated tumors (n=927), and tumor-associated macrophages-treated tumors (n=326).
Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes/Proteins Database Analysis
The Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes/Proteins (STRING) [22] database (https://string-db.org/cgi/network?taskId=bBFI2KUwm2K4&sessionId=bCWnxnWN8ki0) can research for known and predicted protein networks and analyze the indirect or direct effects of protein-protein interactions. The STRING database was used to construct a text-mining gene network related to ESRP1.
Survival Analysis
The Kaplan-Meier plotter [23] (https://kmplot.com/analysis/) can assess the effects of 54 000 genes on the survival rate of 21 cancer types, and its primary objective is to accomplish the discovery and validation of surviving biomarkers based on meta-analysis. We used this tool to analyze the role of ESRP1 in BC and the impact of ESRP1 on patient survival.
Gene Expression Profiling Interactive Analysis
The Gene Expression Profiling Interactive Analysis (GEPIA) [24] database (GEPIA, http://gepia.cancer-pku.cn/detail.php?gene=ESRP1) is an interactive web server that uses standard processing pipelines to analyze the RNA sequencing expression data of many tumors and many normal samples from the TCGA and Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) databases. We used GEPIA to analyze the expression level of ESRP1 in BC tissues.
Gene Ontology Enrichment Analysis
The Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID) [25] database (https://david.ncifcrf.gov/) is a biological information database that integrates biological data and analysis tools. Functional annotation of DAVID was used to analyze ESRP1 and text-mining genes to identify enriched biological themes, particularly Gene Ontology (GO) terms (biological processes, cellular components, and molecular functions), and visualize genes on the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway maps.
Breast Cancer Genome Atlas Analysis
The Invasive Breast Carcinoma database (METABRIC, Nature 2012 & Nat Commun 2016, including 2509 samples) was selected to construct The Cancer Genome Atlas of ESRPs, based on the cBioPortal [26] database (https://www.cbioportal.org). Selected genomic profiles were as follows: mutations, putative copy-number alterations from DNAcopy, and mRNA expression (microarray) z-Scores relative to diploid samples.
Encyclopedia of RNA Interactomes Analysis
The Encyclopedia of RNA Interactomes (ENCORI) [27] database (http://starbase.sysu.edu.cn/index.php) can analyze many interaction relationships, including miRNA-mRNA, miRNA-ncRNA, miRNA-mRNA, ncRNA-RNA, RNA-RNA, Rbiological process-ncRNA, and Rbiological process-mRNA interactions from CLIP-seq, degradome-seq, and RNA-RNA interactome data. In our study, ENCORI was used to predict miRNAs that regulated ESRP1 and showed the expression level of miRNAs. The options used in this study were as follows: CLIP data: medium stringency (≥3); Degradome data: with or without data; Pan-Cancer: 1 cancer type.
Statistical Analysis
The comparison of mRNA expression of the ESRP family between BC and normal samples was detected using the t test. Using the 2(−ΔΔC(T)) method, the calculation of qRT-PCR was performed to find the relative expression level of ESRP1 in human BC and normal breast cells. The ANOVA method was used to reveal the ESRP1 expression profile, based on the GEPIA database, and the related parameters were: |Log2FC| cutoff: 1; q-value cutoff: 0.01. The ESRP1 expression box plot was also drafted based on GEPIA, and the related parameters were: |Log2FC| cutoff: 1; P value cutoff: 0.05. Survival curves of various subtypes in patients with BC with different expression levels of ESRP1 were drafted using the log-rank test and hazard ratio (HR) of the Kaplan-Meier plotter. P<0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
Results
Transcription Levels of ESRPs in BC
To date, 2 members of the ESRP family (ESRP1 and ESRP2) have been reported in different types of cancer. However, little is known about the role of ESRP1 and ESRP2 in BC. To detect whether the ESRP family is involved in the progression of BC, the Oncomine database was used to compare the expression of ESRP1 and ESRP2 of BC samples and normal samples. A total of 369 unique analyses of ESRP1 and 386 unique analyses of ESRP2 were included in the Oncomine database (Figure 1A). Oncomine analysis showed that the mRNA expression level of ESRP1, but not that of ESRP2, was significantly elevated in 9 different BC datasets among different types of cancer. The mRNA expression level of ESRP1 in patients with BC was significantly upregulated in 9 datasets. Ma et al [28] reported that the mRNA expression level of ESRP1 was overexpressed in invasive ductal breast carcinoma and ductal breast carcinoma in situ epithelia (Figure 1B). The TCGA data (Table 1) showed that ESRP1 expression was significantly upregulated in intraductal cribriform breast adenocarcinoma, mixed lobular and ductal breast carcinoma, invasive lobular breast carcinoma, invasive breast carcinoma, and invasive ductal breast carcinoma (Figure 1C). Richardson et al [29] found that the mRNA expression of ESRP1 was significantly upregulated in ductal breast carcinoma (Figure 1D). In addition, Zhao et al [30] reported that the mRNA expression of ESRP1 was significantly upregulated in invasive ductal breast carcinoma (Figure 1E). However, the mRNA expression level of ESRP2 was not significantly elevated in BC (Figure 1F).
Table 1.
Type of breast cancer versus normal breast tissue reference invasive breast carcinoma | Fold change | P Value | t-Test | Source and/or reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ESRP1 | Invasive ductal breast carcinoma epihelia | 2.250 | 3.79E-6 | 6.423 | Ma breast [28] |
Ductal breast carcinoma in situ epithelia | 2.337 | 1.04E-5 | 6.140 | Ma breast [28] | |
Intraductal cribriform breast adenocarcinoma | 4.225 | 8.09E-16 | 12.178 | TCGA breast | |
Mixed lobular and ductal breast carcinoma | 2.985 | 3.56E-6 | 6.452 | TCGA breast | |
Invasive lobular breast carcinoma | 3.120 | 1.21E-6 | 8.525 | TCGA breast | |
Invasive breast carcinoma | 3.144 | 2.65E-15 | 9.426 | TCGA breast | |
Invasive ductal breast carcinoma | 3.933 | 5.32E-19 | 12.204 | TCGA breast | |
Ductal breast carcinoma | 3.178 | 1.72E-6 | 6.230 | Richardson breast [29] | |
Invasive ductal breast carcinoma | 2.390 | 3.67E-5 | 7.168 | Zhao breast [30] | |
ESRP2 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
NA – not available; TCGA – The Cancer Genome Atlas.
Upregulation of ESRP1 Expression Was Closely Associated with BC
Using the Oncomine database, a meta-analysis of ESRP1 expression in BC was performed to confirm the significantly elevated expression of ESRP1 in general cases of BC, including 770 samples from 9 datasets (Figure 2). The pooled meta-analysis demonstrated that ESRP1 mRNA levels were prominently upregulated in 9 clinical cohorts (P=1.21E-13), indicating that the upregulation of ESRP1 expression was remarkably associated with BC. To demonstrate that ESRP1 was highly expressed in BC samples compared to normal samples, the verification of cells and tissues was performed. As shown in Figure 3A, the transcription level of ESRP1 mRNA in the BC cell line was overexpressed. The mRNA expression level of ESRP1 in MCF7 cells (human BC cells) was higher than that in MCF-10A cells (human normal breast epithelial tissue cells), as observed by qPCR (Figure 3B). In the GOBO analysis based on BC cell lines, the expression of ESRP1 in the basal-A and Luminal subtypes was higher than that in the basal-B subtype of BC, and the hormone receptor (HR)-sensitive and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (Her-2) subtypes expressed higher levels of ESRP1 than did the triple-negative subtype (Figure 3C). Furthermore, increased expression of ESRP1 in BC tissues was observed using the GEPIA database (Figure 4A, 4B), and we performed immunohistochemistry to verify that ESRP1 expression was upregulated in BC tissues. As shown in Figure 4C, we found that ESRP1 was overexpressed in BC tissues compared to normal tissues.
Analysis of ESRP1 Expression Pattern in BC Patients with Different Clinical Characteristics
Because the expression level of ESRP1 was significantly upregulated in BC, the UALCAN database was used to analyze the extent of ESRP1 expression patterns in patients with BC with different clinical characteristics.
As shown in Figure 5A-5E, we found that ESRP1 expression was significantly different based on age, sex, menopause status, race and lymph node metastasis status. Moreover, the mRNA expression levels of ESRP1 increased significantly among all stages of BC compared to those of normal samples, indicating that ESRP1 might play a crucial role in the occurrence and progression of BC (Figure 5F). As shown in Figure 5G, a significantly high expression of ESRP1 was observed in different subtypes of BC, such as Luminal, Her-2-positive, and triple-negative subtypes. In addition, ESRP1 expression was significantly elevated in TP53 mutation status and TP53 nonmutation status (Figure 5H).
High Expression of ESRP1 Was Closely Correlated to Poor Prognosis in BC Patients
We further evaluated the prognostic value of ESRP1 in BC. High expression of ESRP1 mRNA was found to be significantly related to shorter relapse-free survival in all patients with BC (HR=1.73, P=4.4e-12) (Figure 6A). In particular, the analysis of different BC subtypes showed that the high expression of ESRP1 mRNA was significantly correlated with ER-positive (HR=1.57, P=0.0024) (Figure 6B), basal (HR=1.75, P=0.00076) (Figure 6D), Luminal A (HR=1.47, 0.0024) (Figure 6E), Luminal B (HR=1.38, P=0.04) (Figure 6F), and positive lymph node status (HR=1.44, P=0.004) (Figure 6G) subtypes of BC as well as with Her-2-negative (HR=1.85, P=6.2e-05) (Figure 6H). However, overexpression of ESRP1 had no significant correlation with survival of the ER-negative (HR=1.2, P=0.27) (Figure 6C) and Her-2-positive (HR=0.99, P=0.98) (Figure 6I) subtypes of BC.
The Predictive Function and Pathways of ESRP1 and Its Frequently Altered Text-Mining Genes in Patients with BC
Using the cBioPortal database, the alterations of ESRP1 expression in BC were analyzed. As shown in Figure 7A, ESRP1 expression was altered in 563 (26%) of the 2173 BC samples. ESRP1 was mainly amplified and highly expressed in BC. As shown in Figure 7B, we then established a text-mining network for ESRP1, and the 40 most frequently altered genes (genes without text-mining relationships) were excluded. The functions of ESRP1 and the text-mining genes related to ESRP1 were predicted by GO and KEGG analyses in DAVID. Based on the GO terms of biological process, cellular component, and molecular function, we predicted the potential functions of target genes using GO enrichment analysis. We found that GO: 0006397 (mRNA processing), GO: 0008380 (RNA splicing), GO: 0008543 (fibroblast growth factor receptor signaling pathway), GO: 0043484 (regulation of RNA splicing), GO: 0043518 (negative regulation of DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator), GO: 0000380 (alternative mRNA splicing, via spliceosome), GO: 0045944 (positive regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter), and GO: 0000398 (mRNA splicing, via spliceosome) were the biological processes significantly regulated by ESRP1 alterations in BC (Figure 8A). GO: 0005634 (nucleus), GO: 0005654 (nucleoplasm), and GO: 0005737 (cytoplasm) were the cellular components affected by changes in ESRP1 expression; and GO: 0000166 (nucleotide binding), GO: 0003723 (RNA binding), GO: 0044822 (poly A RNA binding), GO: 0003729 (mRNA binding), GO: 0003676 (nucleic acid binding), GO: 0043565 (sequence-specific DNA binding), GO: 0001227 (transcriptional repressor activity, RNA polymerase II transcription regulatory region sequence-specific binding), GO: 0003714 (transcription corepressor activity), GO: 0044212 (transcription regulatory region DNA binding), and GO: 0005515 (protein binding) were the molecular functions that were significantly controlled by ESRP1 alterations (Figure 8B, 8C).
KEGG analysis defined the pathways associated with the altered function of ESRP1 and frequently altered text-mining genes. KEGG analysis revealed 2 pathways related to the altered function of ESRP1 in BC (Figure 8D), including microRNAs in cancer and adherens junction pathways involved in the tumorigenesis and pathogenesis of BC (Figure 9).
Identification of Regulatory miRNA and Their Effects on Prognosis in BC
A total of 60 miRNAs were predicted by the ENCORI platform to regulate ESRP1 (Table 2). Among them, 31 miRNA-ESRP1 pairs were negatively correlated. However, only 1 miRNA-ESRP1 pair predicted good prognosis for patients with BC. As shown in Figure 10A, the high expression of hsa-miR-181c-5p was closely associated with longer overall survival in BC. Collectively, hsa-miR-181c-5p may exert its anti-tumor function in BC by targeting ESRP1 in BC (Figure 10B), indicating the great potential of the hsa-miR-181c-5p-ESRP1 axis as a prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target of BC.
Table 2.
No. | miRNA | Coefficient-R | P value |
---|---|---|---|
1 | hsa-miR-15a-5p | −0.056 | 6.49E-02 |
2 | hsa-miR-103a-3p | −0.04 | 1.88E-01 |
3 | hsa-miR-181a-5p | −0.141 | 3.31E-06 |
4 | hsa-miR-181b-5p | −0.057 | 6.20E-02 |
5 | hsa-miR-181c-5p | −0.091 | 2.71E-03 |
6 | hsa-miR-204-5p | −0.239 | 1.46E-15 |
7 | hsa-miR-211-5p | −0.057 | 5.93E-02 |
8 | hsa-miR-214-3p | −0.168 | 2.51E-08 |
9 | hsa-miR-124-3p | −0.045 | 1.38E-01 |
10 | hsa-miR-137 | −0.107 | 4.17E-04 |
11 | hsa-miR-154-5p | −0.077 | 1.17E-02 |
12 | hsa-miR-195-5p | −0.111 | 2.43E-04 |
13 | hsa-miR-363-3p | −0.011 | 7.20E-01 |
14 | hsa-miR-376c-3p | −0.161 | 1.02E-07 |
15 | hsa-miR-374a-5p | −0.051 | 9.27E-02 |
16 | hsa-miR-381-3p | −0.244 | 4.13E-16 |
17 | hsa-miR-487a-3p | −0.155 | 2.98E-07 |
18 | hsa-miR-181d-5p | −0.067 | 2.76E-02 |
19 | hsa-miR-498 | −0.057 | 6.27E-02 |
20 | hsa-miR-520d-5p | −0.048 | 1.17E-01 |
21 | hsa-miR-506-3p | −0.025 | 4.17E-01 |
22 | hsa-miR-514a-3p | −0.092 | 2.49E-03 |
23 | hsa-miR-144-5p | −0.087 | 3.96E-03 |
24 | hsa-miR-450b-5p | −0.14 | 3.78E-06 |
25 | hsa-miR-889-3p | −0.245 | 2.68E-16 |
26 | hsa-miR-944 | −0.201 | 2.25E-11 |
27 | hsa-miR-1252-5p | −0.018 | 5.57E-01 |
28 | hsa-miR-1197 | −0.135 | 8.06E-06 |
29 | hsa-miR-2681-3p | −0.05 | 9.97E-02 |
30 | hsa-miR-4524a-5p | −0.069 | 2.29E-02 |
31 | hsa-miR-873-3p | −0.011 | 7.23E-01 |
32 | hsa-miR-16-5p | 0.25 | 7.10E-17 |
33 | hsa-miR-18a-5p | 0.184 | 1.05E-09 |
34 | hsa-miR-25-3p | 0.181 | 1.87E-09 |
35 | hsa-miR-32-5p | 0.109 | 3.03E-04 |
36 | hsa-miR-33a-5p | 0.272 | 8.39E-20 |
37 | hsa-miR-92a-3p | 0.228 | 3.13E-14 |
38 | hsa-miR-107 | 0.054 | 7.76E-02 |
39 | hsa-miR-15b-5p | 0.216 | 6.11E-13 |
40 | hsa-miR-9-5p | 0.183 | 1.28E-09 |
41 | hsa-miR-155-5p | 0.099 | 1.08E-03 |
42 | hsa-miR-200a-3p | 0.272 | 6.85E-20 |
43 | hsa-miR-424-5p | 0.09 | 3.09E-03 |
44 | hsa-miR-18b-5p | 0.062 | 4.27E-02 |
45 | hsa-miR-497-5p | 0.006 | 8.42E-01 |
46 | hsa-miR-524-5p | 0.026 | 3.94E-01 |
47 | hsa-miR-503-5p | 0.091 | 2.63E-03 |
48 | hsa-miR-92b-3p | 0.105 | 5.53E-04 |
49 | hsa-miR-576-5p | 0.236 | 3.31E-15 |
50 | hsa-miR-588 | 0.068 | 2.53E-02 |
51 | hsa-miR-33b-5p | 0.281 | 3.45E-21 |
52 | hsa-miR-802 | 0.064 | 3.46E-02 |
53 | hsa-miR-501-3p | 0.208 | 5.01E-12 |
54 | hsa-miR-502-3p | 0.074 | 1.48E-02 |
55 | hsa-miR-628-5p | 0.256 | 9.33E-18 |
56 | hsa-miR-877-5p | 0.208 | 4.65E-12 |
57 | hsa-miR-374b-5p | 0.047 | 1.21E-01 |
58 | hsa-miR-1276 | 0.131 | 1.56E-05 |
59 | hsa-miR-1278 | 0.018 | 5.46E-01 |
60 | hsa-miR-4661-5p | 0.229 | 2.43E-14 |
Discussion
BC is one of the most common cancers in women [31]. At present, personalized treatment of BC is being highly recommended in clinical practice. Both ER and Her-2 have been identified as therapeutic targets for BC, and numerous patients with BC have received targeted therapy and recovered from the disease [32–35]. However, the problem is that ER and Her-2 are currently the only identified biomarkers for clinical treatment [34,35]. For the treatment of BC and its various subtypes, the exploration of other valuable biomarkers is urgently needed. Fortunately, biomedical researchers have established different bioinformatics databases, such as Oncomine [36] and TCGA [37], and a series of potential biomarkers were predicted and identified as valuable therapeutic targets [38].
Recently, it has been reported that ESRP1 can promote tumor progression in cancers including colorectal cancer [14], ER-positive BC [15], and ovarian cancer [16,17]. However, ESRP2 can exert a tumor suppressive effect. For example, Mizutani et al demonstrated that ESRP2 inhibited the progression of clear cell renal cell carcinoma through the Arkadia-ESRP2 axis [39]. Our research showed that ESRP1 expression was significantly overexpressed in BC compared to in normal samples, which suggested the specific role of ESRP1 in BC, but not that of ESRP2. It has been reported that the occurrence of BC involves the activation of BC stem cells [40–43], which regulate EMT in human epithelial breast cells through the Ras-MAPK pathway [6]. Interestingly, ESRPs play important roles in EMT. The GEPIA database and immunohistochemistry analysis demonstrated that the ESRP1 mRNA expression level was significantly upregulated in BC. By grouping patients by clinicopathological characteristics, we further studied the expression patterns of ESRP1 in patients with BC and observed that the mRNA expression of ESRP1 was significantly upregulated in patients with BC by stage, sex, age, race, menopause status, subtypes, nodal metastasis status, and TP53 mutant.
Survival analysis indicated the prognostic value of ESRP1 in BC. Highly expressed ESRP1 was associated with poor prognosis in patients with BC. The research of Ishimoto et al. supports our results [44]. In patients with ER-positive, basal-like, Luminal A, Luminal B, and Her-2-negative subtypes of BC, and lymph node-positive status of BC, the high expression level of ESRP1 was related to poor prognosis, suggesting that ESRP1 might be a potential target for diagnosis and treatment in these BC subtypes. However, the meaningful roles of ESRP1 in ER-negative and Her-2-positive BC subtypes were not predicted.
We found that ESRP1 was mainly amplified and overexpressed in BC. To explore the mechanism of ESRP1 in BC, we constructed a gene text-mining network and performed GO enrichment analysis to find possible target proteins that interacted with ESRP1. MicroRNAs in cancer indicated that alterations of ESRP1 regulated CD44 to play an important role in BC. The basic mechanism for achieving functional genomic diversity is alternative RNA splicing, and the dysregulation of alternative splicing is increasingly involved in various human diseases, especially in cancer progression and survival [45–48]. Alternative splicing plays an extremely important role in EMT [49,50]. It has been reported that EMT is abnormally activated in cancer cells to mediate tumor recurrence and distant metastasis [51,52]. Alternative splicing of CD44 can lead to EMT and BC metastasis [9,49,53,54], and the regulatory mechanism of CD44 alternative splicing is related to 2 splicing factors, including heterologous ribonucleoprotein M (hnRNPM) and ESRP1, of which, hnRNPM is widely expressed and functions in a mesenchymal cell state-specific manner to adjust CD44 alternative splicing. This function of hnRNPM is regulated by competition with ESRP1, which is expressed in epithelial tissues but not in mesenchymal tissues [10,12,55]. ESRP1 and hnRNPM and have common guanine-uridine binding sites [8,56], and the activity of hnRNPM is inhibited by ESRP1 binding to the same guanine-uridine-rich cis-elements near CD44 variable exons [41]. It has been reported that the expression of ESRP1 leads to increased expression of CD44V isoforms. In addition, CD44V interacts with the xCT subunit of the glutamate-cystine transporter and makes it more stable, which results in the increased uptake of cysteine and the synthesis of glutathione [57]. Moreover, glutathione is considered as an antioxidant and confers the ability of resisting reactive oxygen species on cells. Therefore, the expression of ESRP1 increases the content of glutathione, which contributes to strengthening the proliferation of cancer cells [34].
It has been reported that microRNA expression is related to tumor occurrence, development, and treatment, indicating that these macromolecules may become potential diagnostic, prognostic, and predictive biomarkers [58]. We identified miRNAs that could negatively regulate ESRP1 by bioinformatics methods, thereby establishing that the miRNA-ESRP1 regulatory network may be a potentially prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target in BC.
Conclusions
In this study, we systematically analyzed the expression level, clinicopathological characteristics, function, and prognostic value of ESRP1 in BC. The mRNA expression level of ESRP1, but not of ESRP2, in BC tissue samples was significantly upregulated compared to that in normal samples. In addition, we established a gene text-mining network and performed GO enrichment analysis to explore the biological process, cellular component, and molecular function. KEGG analysis defined pathways related to the altered functions of ESRP1 and frequently altered text-mining genes. Furthermore, survival analysis predicted that ESRP1 overexpression was associated with poor prognosis in patients with BC. In addition, we identified that the hsa-miR-181c-5p-ESRP1 regulatory network may be a potential prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target for patients with BC. We believe our results suggest that ESRP1 is a potential and valuable biomarker and a crucial prognostic factor in BC.
Footnotes
Conflicts of Interest
None.
Source of support: This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31670989), Key R&D Program of Shandong Province (2019GSF107037), and Science and Technology Project of Qingdao, China (18-6-1-88-nsh)
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