Circular RNA ITCH suppresses proliferation, invasion, and glycolysis of ovarian cancer cells by up-regulating CDH1 via sponging miR-106a

2020 
Accumulating data suggested that circular RNAs (circRNAs) played important roles in the development of human cancer. However, the potential mechanism of circRNAs in ovarian cancer remains unclear. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) was used to measure the levels of circRNA itchy E3 ubiquitin protein ligase (circ-ITCH), microRNA-106a (miR-106a) and E-cadherin (CDH1). Cell Counting Kit-8 (CCK-8) and Transwell assay were carried out to measure cell proliferation and invasion. Glucose consumption, lactate production, and ATP level were assessed by the glucose, lactate, and ATP assay kits, respectively. Cell apoptosis was detected by Flow cytometry. The binding sites were predicted by StarBase v.2.0 or microT-CDS and verified by dual-luciferase reporter assay and RNA immunoprecipitation (RIP) assays. CDH1 protein level was determined by western blot. The functional role of circ-ITCH was measured by xenograft tumor model in vivo. Circ-ITCH was down-regulated in ovarian cancer and positively correlated with 5-year overall survival of patients with ovarian cancer. RNase R digestion assay confirmed that circ-ITCH was more stable than its linear mRNA form. Moreover, circ-ITCH was mainly distributed in the cytoplasm of ovarian cancer cells. Functionally, circ-ITCH overexpression hindered proliferation, invasion, glycolysis and promoted apoptosis of ovarian cancer cells. Besides, circ-ITCH overexpression inhibited ovarian cancer cell progression by targeting miR-106a. Additionally, CDH1 was a target of miR-106a, and the protein level of CDH1 was negatively regulated by miR-106a. Similarly, CDH1 knockdown recovered the inhibition effects of miR-106a inhibitor or circ-ITCH overexpression on the progression of ovarian cancer cells. Importantly, circ-ITCH up-regulated the protein level of CDH1 by sponging miR-106a in ovarian cancer cells. Circ-ITCH overexpression suppressed the growth of ovarian cancer cells in vivo. Circ-ITCH suppressed proliferation, invasion, glycolysis, and promoted apoptosis of ovarian cancer cells by modulating the miR-106a/CDH1 axis.
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