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Cytoplasmic Metadherin (MTDH) Provides Survival Advantage under Conditions of Stress by Acting as RNA-binding Protein
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Cytoplasmic Metadherin (MTDH) Provides Survival Advantage under Conditions of Stress by Acting as RNA-binding Protein

Xiangbing Meng, Danlin Zhu, Shujie Yang, Xinjun Wang, Zhi Xiong, Yuping Zhang, Pavla Brachova and Kimberly K. Leslie
The Journal of biological chemistry, Vol.287(7), pp.4485-4491
02/10/2012
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.C111.291518
PMCID: PMC3281628
PMID: 22199357
url
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.C111.291518View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

Overexpression of metadherin (MTDH) has been documented in many solid tumors and is implicated in metastasis and chemoresistance. MTDH has been detected at the plasma membrane as well as in the cytoplasm and nucleus, and the function of MTDH in these locales remains under investigation. In the nucleus, MTDH acts as a transcription co-factor to induce expression of chemoresistance-associated genes. However, MTDH is predominantly cytoplasmic in prostate tumors, and this localization correlates with poor prognosis. Herein, we used endometrial cancer cells as a model system to define a new role for MTDH in the cytoplasm. First, MTDH was primarily localized to the cytoplasm in endometrial cancer cells, and the N-terminal region of MTDH was required to maintain cytoplasmic localization. Next, we identified novel binding partners for cytoplasmic MTDH, including RNA-binding proteins and components of the RNA-induced silencing complex. Nucleic acids were required for the association of MTDH with these cytoplasmic proteins. Furthermore, MTDH interacted with and regulated protein expression of multiple mRNAs, such as PDCD10 and KDM6A. Depletion of cytoplasmic MTDH was associated with increased stress granule formation, reduced survival in response to chemotherapy and the tyrosine kinase inhibitor BIBF1120, Rad51 nuclear accumulation, and cell cycle arrest at G(2)/M. Finally, in vivo tumor formation was abrogated with knockdown of cytoplasmic MTDH. Taken together, our data identify a novel function for cytoplasmic MTDH as an RNA-binding protein. Our findings implicate cytoplasmic MTDH in cell survival and broad drug resistance via association with RNA and RNA-binding proteins.

Drug Resistance Protein Structure RNA Stress Obstetrics and Gynecology Amino Acid Sequence Animals Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins Cell Adhesion Molecules/genetics/metabolism Cell Line Tumor Cell Nucleus/genetics/metabolism Cell Survival/physiology Cytoplasm/genetics/metabolism Neoplasm/physiology Female Histone Demethylases/genetics/metabolism Humans Male Membrane Proteins Mice Nude Nuclear Proteins/genetics/metabolism Protein Biosynthesis/physiology Tertiary Proto-Oncogene Proteins Messenger/genetics/metabolism RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics/metabolism Sequence Deletion Physiological/physiology

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