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Tumor suppressive function of <scp>IGF2BP1</scp> in gastric cancer through decreasing <scp>MYC</scp>

Ning Ding, Guodong Cao, Zhuo Wang, Shengjun Xu, Wenwen Chen

2023Cancer Science14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Gastric cancer is one of the most common causes of cancer‐related death worldwide. The N 6 ‐methyladenosine (m 6 A) reader IGF2BP1 (insulin‐like growth factor‐2 mRNA binding protein 1) has been reported to promote cancer progression by stabilizing oncogenic mRNAs through its m 6 A‐binding activity in some tumors. However, the role of IGF2BP1 in gastric carcinogenesis remains unclear. In this study, we found that IGF2BP1 is significantly downregulated in tumor tissues from patients with gastric cancer. Lower expression of IGF2BP1 is associated with poor prognosis. Gastric cancer cell proliferation is suppressed by IGF2BP1 in an m 6 A‐dependent manner. Additionally, IGF2BP1 is able to significantly attenuate tumor growth of gastric cancer cells. Further m 6 A sequencing and m 6 A‐RNA immunoprecipitation assays show that MYC (c‐myc proto‐oncogene) mRNA is a target transcript of IGF2BP1 in gastric cancer cells. IGF2BP1 inhibits gastric cancer cell proliferation by reducing the mRNA and protein expression of MYC . Mechanistically, IGF2BP1 promotes the degradation of MYC mRNA and inhibits its translation efficiency. Taken together, these data suggest that IGF2BP1 plays a tumor‐suppressive role in gastric carcinogenesis by downregulating MYC in an m 6 A‐dependent manner, thereby making the IGF2BP1‐ MYC axis a potential target for gastric cancer treatment.

Topics & Concepts

OncogeneCancerCarcinogenesisMessenger RNACancer researchImmunoprecipitationBiologyMolecular biologyCell cultureGeneCell cycleGeneticsRNA modifications and cancerCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchRNA Research and Splicing