Scientists discover new therapeutic target of angiogenesis for clear cell renal cell carcinoma patients

Scientists discover new therapeutic target of angiogenesis for clear cell renal cell carcinoma patients
Proposed model for the DMDRMR/miR-378a-5p/DAB2IP axis promoting the angiogenesis and sunitinib resistance of ccRCC. Credit: SIBET

The tumor biomarker research team from the Suzhou Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences recently reported that DMDRMR/miR-378a-5p/ DAB2IP axis promotes angiogenesis and sunitinib resistance, potentially providing a diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic target for treating clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) patients.

These findings further expand and highlight their previous research.

ccRCC is a major type of RCC and characterized by being highly angiogenic and densely vascularized. Some important genes are frequently mutated in RCC, including Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressant gene, resulting in abnormal activation of downstream proteins and signaling pathways, and leading to neovascularization, thereby promoting the tumorigenesis, development and metastasis of this tumor.

Therefore, targeted angiogenesis inhibitors, such as sunitinib and sorafenib, have been used as first-line therapy for patients with advanced RCC. However, most patients develop acquired to the angiogenesis therapy. Therefore, further understanding of tumor angiogenesis for ccRCC is highly desired.

Vascular endothelial cell growth factor A (VEGFA), a member of the VEGF family, is the strongest vascular growth factor in inducing tumor angiogenesis. Tumor generally are highly expressed for VEGFA, which promotes endothelial cell differentiation, proliferation, migration, and angiogenesis by binding to its primary receptor VEGFR2. Thus, VEGFA/ VEGFR2 signaling pathways play a key role in tumor angiogenesis.

Last year, the researchers showed that a long non-coding RNA, DNA methylation-deregulated and RNA m6A reader-cooperating lncRNA (DMDRMR) acts as a cofactor for insulin-like growth factor 2 mRNA-binding protein 3 (IGF2BP3) to stabilize in an m6A-dependent manner, thus exerting essential oncogenic roles in ccRCC.

Additionally, they also found that DMDRMR increases the expression level of VEGFA and regulates the biological pathways associated with angiogenesis, but these effects are independent of its binding protein IGF2BP3. Based on this, a new scientific question has been raised: whether and how does DMDRMR promote neovascularization in ccRCC?

In this study, the researchers demonstrated that DMDRMR serves as a sponge of miR-378a-5p to increase enhancer of zeste homologue 2 (EZH2) and smad ubiquitination regulatory factor 1 (SMURF1) expression, thus promoting EZH2-mediated transcriptional repression of DOC-2/DAB2 interactive protein (DAB2IP) and SMURF1-mediated degradation of DAB2IP.

Consequently, this axis activates VEGFA/VEGFR2 signaling pathway and promotes angiogenesis and resistance of to sunitinib in ccRCC.

They also found that DMDRMR/miR-378a-5p/IGF2BP3 axis shows high expression and with ccRCC patients, and the combination of overexpressed DMDRMR and downregulated DAB2IP predicted the poorest overall survival of ccRCC patients, supporting that the axis may serve as a novel target for combination diagnosis/therapy of ccRCC patients.

These findings may have high clinical relevance for future translation to develop targeted therapies for patients with ccRCC.

This study was published in Cell Death and Disease.

More information: Yumeng Zhu et al, DMDRMR promotes angiogenesis via antagonizing DAB2IP in clear cell renal cell carcinoma, Cell Death & Disease (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41419-022-04898-3

Journal information: Cell Death and Disease
Citation: Scientists discover new therapeutic target of angiogenesis for clear cell renal cell carcinoma patients (2022, May 25) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-05-scientists-therapeutic-angiogenesis-cell-renal.html
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