Advanced search
Start date
Betweenand


Recruitment of polycomb repressive complex 2 by intronic long noncoding RNA ANRASSF1 modulates RASSF1A expression and cell proliferation

Full text
Author(s):
Felipe César Ferrarezi Beckedorff
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Conjunto das Químicas (IQ e FCF) (CQ/DBDCQ)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Sergio Verjovski Almeida; Daniela Sanchez Bassères; Helena Paula Brentani; Dirce Maria Carraro; Carla Columbano de Oliveira
Advisor: Sergio Verjovski Almeida
Abstract

Tumor-suppressor RASSF1A gene down-regulation has been implicated in increasing cell proliferation in several tumors. Its expression is regulated by epigenetic events involving polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), however the molecular mechanisms modulating recruitment of this epigenetic modifier to the locus remain largely unknown. Here, we identify and characterize ANRASSF1, an endogenous unspliced long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) that is transcribed from the opposite strand of RASSF1 gene in several cell lines and tissues, and binds to PRC2. ANRASSF1 is transcribed by RNA Polymerase II, 5\'-capped, polyadenylated, displays nuclear localization, and has on average a four-fold shorter half-life compared to other lncRNAs that bind PRC2. ANRASSF1 ectopic overexpression decreases RASSF1A abundance and increases the proliferation rate of HeLa cells, whereas its silencing causes opposite effects. These changes in NRASSF1 levels do not affect RASSF1C isoform abundance. ANRASSF1 overexpression causes a marked increase both in PRC2 occupancy and in histone H3K27me3 repressive mark specifically at the RASSF1A promoter region. No effect of ANRASSF1 overexpression is detected on PRC2 occupancy and on histone H3K27me3 at the promoter regions of RASSF1C and of four other neighbor genes, including two well-characterized tumor suppressor genes. Additionally, we demonstrate that ANRASSF1 forms an RNA/DNA hybrid, and recruits SUZ12, a PRC2 component, to the RASSF1A promoter. Notably, depletion of ANRASSF1 disrupts SUZ12 occupancy on RASSF1A promoter as measured by RNAse-ChIP assay. Together, these results show a new mechanism of epigenetic repression of RASSF1A tumor suppressor gene involving an antisense unspliced lncRNA, in which ANRASSF1 selectively represses expression of the RASSF1 isoform overlapping the antisense transcript in a location-specific manner. In a broader perspective, our findings suggest that other non-characterized unspliced intronic lncRNAs transcribed in the human genome may contribute to a location-specific epigenetic modulation of genes. (AU)