Litcius/Paper detail

Liver cancer initiation requires translational activation by an oncofetal regulon involving LIN28 proteins

Meng-Hsiung Hsieh, Yonglong Wei, Lin Li, Liem H. Nguyen, Yu-Hsuan Lin, Jun Yong, Xuxu Sun, Xun Wang, Xin Luo, Sarah K. Knutson, Christina Bracken, George Q. Daley, John T. Powers, Hao Zhu

2024Journal of Clinical Investigation15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It is unknown which posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms are required for oncogenic competence. Here, we show that the LIN28 family of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), which facilitate posttranscriptional RNA metabolism within ribonucleoprotein networks, is essential for the initiation of diverse oncotypes of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In HCC models driven by NRASG12V/Tp53, CTNNB1/YAP/Tp53, or AKT/Tp53, mice without Lin28a and Lin28b were markedly impaired in cancer initiation. We biochemically defined an oncofetal regulon of 15 factors connected to LIN28 through direct mRNA and protein interactions. Interestingly, all were RBPs and only 1 of 15 was a Let-7 target. Polysome profiling and reporter assays showed that LIN28B directly increased the translation of 8 of these 15 RBPs. As expected, overexpression of LIN28B and IGFBP1-3 was able to genetically rescue cancer initiation. Using this platform to probe components downstream of LIN28, we found that 8 target RBPs were able to restore NRASG12V/Tp53 cancer formation in Lin28a/Lin28b-deficient mice. Furthermore, these LIN28B targets promote cancer initiation through an increase in protein synthesis. LIN28B, central to an RNP regulon that increases translation of RBPs, is important for tumor initiation in the liver.

Topics & Concepts

RegulonRNA-binding proteinLIN28BiologyTranslation (biology)RibonucleoproteinCell biologyTranslational regulationPolysomeCancer researchMessenger RNARNARegulation of gene expressionGeneticsTranscription factorGeneRibosomeSOX2RNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms