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Lnc00462717 regulates the permeability of the blood‐brain tumor barrier through interaction with PTBP1 to inhibit the miR‐186‐5p/Occludin signaling pathway

Cai Zhang, Xiaoyi Zhang, Jiahong Wang, Di Fan, Yixue Xue, Xiangdan Lin, Ying Zhang, Hong Zhang, Zhou Zhang, Yan-ting Gu

2020The FASEB Journal16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Blood-brain tumor barrier (BTB) severely restricts the efficient delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs into brain tumor tissue, which is a critical obstacle for glioma treatment. Recently, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have shown as regulation factors of numerous biological processes. In this study, we identified that Lnc00462717 was upregulated in glioma endothelial cells (GECs), and that knockdown of Lnc00462717 significantly increased the BTB permeability. Both bioinformatics and RNA immunoprecipitation (RIP) results revealed that Lnc00462717 interacts with polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTBP1). Moreover, overexpression of PTBP1 significantly reversed the increase in BTB permeability caused by siLnc00462717. Furthermore, the binding sites between miR-186 and PTBP1 as well as between miR-186 and 3'UTR of Occludin mRNA were confirmed by RIP and luciferase assays, respectively. And the interaction of Lnc00462717 and PTBP1 significantly facilitated the binding of PTBP1 to 3'UTR of Occludin mRNA and then blocked the miR-186-5p-induced downregulation of Occludin. In addition, we identified that knockdown of Lnc00462717 or overexpression of miR-186-5p increased the accumulation of doxorubicin (Dox) in brain glioma via the ultrafast liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry system (UFLC-MS/MS system) and decreased the intracranial glioma volume in BALB/c nude mice. Taken together, these results show a novel molecular pathway in BTB that may provide a potential innovative strategy for glioma therapy.

Topics & Concepts

OccludinGene knockdownGliomaDownregulation and upregulationTight junctionPolypyrimidine tract-binding proteinBlood–brain barrierCancer researchCell biologyChemistryMessenger RNARNA-binding proteinMolecular biologyBiologyGeneBiochemistryEndocrinologyCentral nervous systemCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchMicroRNA in disease regulationRNA modifications and cancer