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Featured researches published by Rong Deng.


Molecular Cancer | 2014

SUMOylation of Grb2 enhances the ERK activity by increasing its binding with Sos1

Yingying Qu; Qin Chen; Xueping Lai; Changhong Zhu; Cheng Chen; Xian Zhao; Rong Deng; Ming Xu; Haihua Yuan; Yanli Wang; Jianxiu Yu; Jian Huang

BackgroundGrb2 (Growth factor receptor-bound protein 2) is a key adaptor protein in maintaining the ERK activity via linking Sos1 (Son of sevenless homolog 1) or other proteins to activated RTKs, such as EGFR. Currently, little knowledge is available concerning the post-translational modification (PTM) of Grb2 except for its phosphorylation. Since emerging evidences have highlighted the importance of SUMOylation (Small ubiquitin-related modifier), a reversible PTM, in modulating protein functions, we wondered if Grb2 could be SUMOylated and thereby influences its functions especially involved in the Ras/MEK/ERK pathway.MethodsSUMOylation of Grb2 was analyzed with the in vivo SUMOylation assay using the Ni2+-NTA affinity pulldown and the in vitro E.coli-based SUMOylation assay. To test the ERK activity and cell transformation, the murine fibroblast cell line NIH/3T3 and the murine colon cancer cell line CMT-93 were used for the experiments including Grb2 knockdown, ectopic re-expression, cell transformation and migration. Immunoprecipitation (IP) was employed for seeking proteins that interact with SUMO modified Grb2. Xenograft tumor model in mice was conducted to verify that Grb2 SUMOylation regulated tumorigenesis in vivo.ResultsGrb2 can be SUMOylated by SUMO1 at lysine 56 (K56), which is located in the linker region between the N-terminal SH3 domain and the SH2 domain. Knockdown of Grb2 reduced the ERK activity and suppressed cell motility and tumorigenesis in vitro and in vivo, which were all rescued by stable ectopic re-expression of wild-type Grb2 but not the mutant Grb2K56R. Furthermore, Grb2 SUMOylation at K56 increased the formation of Grb2-Sos1 complex, which sequentially leads to the activation of Ras/MEK/MAPK pathway.ConclusionsOur results provide evidences that Grb2 is SUMOylated in vivo and this modification enhances ERK activities via increasing the formation of Grb2-Sos1 complex, and may consequently promote cell motility, transformation and tumorigenesis.


Oncotarget | 2016

miR186 suppresses prostate cancer progression by targeting Twist1

Xian Zhao; Yanli Wang; Rong Deng; Hailong Zhang; Jinzhuo Dou; Haihua Yuan; Guofang Hou; Yuzhang Du; Qin Chen; Jianxiu Yu

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in north American men, and most its related deaths are due to advanced and metastatic PCa. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying PCa progression are still unclear. Here we use a pair of prostate cell lines P69/M12, which have the same genetic background and the highly metastatic cell line M12 is a subline derived from P69, to identify the pathogenesis of PCa. We find that a key miRNA--miR186 is significantly reduced in M12 compared to that in P69. Further, we validate that miR186 is also downregulated in human PCa specimens, most significantly in the metastatic patient specimens. The low miR186 expression is correlated with poor patient survival. Through knockdown or overexpression of miR186 in PCa cell lines, we discover that miR186 strongly inhibits cell motility, invasive, soft-agar colony formation, 3D culture growth and vasculogenic mimicry (VM) formation capacity, as well as the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) process by downregulation of its target Twist1. Moreover, the inverse relationship between the expression levels of miR186 and Twist1 is confirmed in vivo tumor metastasis experiment and clinical specimens. Taken together, our findings demonstrate an important role of miR186/Twist1 axis in the regulation of PCa progression, suggesting a potential application of miR186/Twist1 in PCa treatment.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Modulation of Fatty Acid Synthase Degradation by Concerted Action of p38 MAP Kinase, E3 Ligase COP1, and SH2-Tyrosine Phosphatase Shp2

Jianxiu Yu; Rong Deng; Helen He Zhu; Sharon S. Zhang; Changhong Zhu; Marc Montminy; Roger J. Davis; Gen-Sheng Feng

Background: FASN is a key enzyme in lipid metabolism, and its overexpression is associated with a variety of human malignancies. Results: Shp2 promotes FASN ubiquitination by acting as an adapter linking FASN with COP1 and p38. Conclusion: Shp2 may act as an adaptor in targeting FASN for its degradation. Significance: This study identifies a new function for Shp2 in lipid metabolism and tumor suppression. The Src-homology 2 (SH2) domain-containing tyrosine phosphatase Shp2 has been known to regulate various signaling pathways triggered by receptor and cytoplasmic tyrosine kinases. Here we describe a novel function of Shp2 in control of lipid metabolism by mediating degradation of fatty acid synthase (FASN). p38-phosphorylated COP1 accumulates in the cytoplasm and subsequently binds FASN through Shp2 here as an adapter, leading to FASN-Shp2-COP1 complex formation and FASN degradation mediated by ubiquitination pathway. By fasting p38 is activated and stimulates FASN protein degradation in mice. Consistently, the FASN protein levels are dramatically elevated in mouse liver and pancreas in which Shp2/Ptpn11 is selectively deleted. Thus, this study identifies a new activity for Shp2 in lipid metabolism.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

SUMOylation at K707 of DGCR8 controls direct function of primary microRNA

Changhong Zhu; Cheng Chen; Jian Huang; Hailong Zhang; Xian Zhao; Rong Deng; Jinzhuo Dou; Hui Jin; Ran Chen; Ming Xu; Qin Chen; Yanli Wang; Jianxiu Yu

DGCR8 (DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8) is essential for primary microRNA (pri-miRNA) processing in the cell nucleus. It specifically combines with Drosha, a nuclear RNase III enzyme, to form the Microprocessor complex (MC) that cleaves pri-miRNA to precursor miRNA (pre-miRNA), which is further processed to mature miRNA by Dicer, a cytoplasmic RNase III enzyme. Increasing evidences suggest that pri-/pre-miRNAs have direct functions in regulation of gene expression, however the underlying mechanism how it is fine-tuned remains unclear. Here we find that DGCR8 is modified by SUMO1 at the major site K(707), which can be promoted by its ERK-activated phosphorylation. SUMOylation of DGCR8 enhances the protein stability by preventing the degradation via the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. More importantly, SUMOylation of DGCR8 does not alter its association with Drosha, the MC activity and miRNA biogenesis, but rather influences its affinity with pri-miRNAs. This altered affinity of DGCR8 with pri-miRNAs seems to control the direct functions of pri-miRNAs in recognition and repression of the target mRNAs, which is evidently linked to the DGCR8 function in regulation of tumorigenesis and cell migration. Collectively, our data suggest a novel mechanism that SUMOylation of DGCR8 controls direct functions of pri-miRNAs in gene silencing.


Nature Communications | 2015

SUMOylation of TARBP2 regulates miRNA/siRNA efficiency

Cheng Chen; Changhong Zhu; Jian Huang; Xian Zhao; Rong Deng; Hailong Zhang; Jinzhuo Dou; Qin Chen; Ming Xu; Haihua Yuan; Yanli Wang; Jianxiu Yu

Small RNA-induced gene silencing is essential for post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression; however, it remains unclear how miRNA/siRNA efficiency is regulated. Here we show that TARBP2 is SUMOylated at K52, which can be enhanced by its phosphorylation. This modification can stabilize TARBP2 via repressing its K48-linked ubiquitination. We find that TARBP2 SUMOylation does not influence the overall production of mature miRNAs, but it regulates miRNA/siRNA efficiency. SUMOylated TARBP2 recruits Ago2 to constitute the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC)-loading complex (RLC), and simultaneously promotes more pre-miRNAs to load into the RLC. Consequently, Ago2 is stabilized and miRNAs/siRNAs bound by TARBP2/Dicer is effectively transferred to Ago2. Thus, these processes lead to the formation of the effective RISC for RNA interference (RNAi). Collectively, our data suggest that SUMOylation of TARBP2 is required for regulating miRNA/siRNA efficiency, which is a general mechanism of miRNA/siRNA regulation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

SUMOylation of the m6A-RNA methyltransferase METTL3 modulates its function

Yuzhang Du; Guofang Hou; Hailong Zhang; Jinzhuo Dou; Jianfeng He; Yanming Guo; Lian Li; Ran Chen; Yanli Wang; Rong Deng; Jian Huang; Bin Jiang; Ming Xu; Jinke Cheng; Guo-Qiang Chen; Xian Zhao; Jianxiu Yu

Abstract The methyltransferase like 3 (METTL3) is a key component of the large N6-adenosine-methyltransferase complex in mammalian responsible for N6-methyladenosine (m6A) modification in diverse RNAs including mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, small nuclear RNA, microRNA precursor and long non-coding RNA. However, the characteristics of METTL3 in activation and post-translational modification (PTM) is seldom understood. Here we find that METTL3 is modified by SUMO1 mainly at lysine residues K177, K211, K212 and K215, which can be reduced by an SUMO1-specific protease SENP1. SUMOylation of METTL3 does not alter its stability, localization and interaction with METTL14 and WTAP, but significantly represses its m6A methytransferase activity resulting in the decrease of m6A levels in mRNAs. Consistently with this, the abundance of m6A in mRNAs is increased with re-expression of the mutant METTL3-4KR compared to that of wild-type METTL3 in human non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) cell line H1299-shMETTL3, in which endogenous METTL3 was knockdown. The alternation of m6A in mRNAs and subsequently change of gene expression profiles, which are mediated by SUMOylation of METTL3, may directly influence the soft-agar colony formation and xenografted tumor growth of H1299 cells. Our results uncover an important mechanism for SUMOylation of METTL3 regulating its m6A RNA methyltransferase activity.


FEBS Journal | 2015

Regulation of RPTPα–c‐Src signalling pathway by miR‐218

Xueping Lai; Qin Chen; Changhong Zhu; Rong Deng; Xian Zhao; Cheng Chen; Yanli Wang; Jianxiu Yu; Jian Huang

Receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase alpha (RPTPα), an activator of Src family kinases, is found significantly overexpressed in human cancer tissues. However, little is known about the regulation of RPTPα expression. miRNAs target multiple genes and play important roles in many cancer processes. Here, we identified a miRNA, miR‐218 that binds directly to the 3′‐UTR of RPTPα. Ectopic overexpression of miR‐218 decreased RPTPα protein leading to decreased dephosphorylation of c‐Src and decreased tumour growth in vitro and in vivo. A feedback loop between c‐Src and miR‐218 was revealed where c‐Src inhibits transcription of SLIT2, which intronically hosts miR‐218. These results show a novel regulatory pathway for RPTPα–c‐Src signalling.


Molecular Cancer | 2017

SUMO1 modification of KHSRP regulates tumorigenesis by preventing the TL-G-Rich miRNA biogenesis

Haihua Yuan; Rong Deng; Xian Zhao; Ran Chen; Guofang Hou; Hailong Zhang; Yanli Wang; Ming Xu; Bin Jiang; Jianxiu Yu

BackgroundMicroRNAs (miRNAs) are important regulators involved in diverse physiological and pathological processes including cancer. SUMO (small ubiquitin-like modifier) is a reversible protein modifier. We recently found that SUMOylation of TARBP2 and DGCR8 is involved in the regulation of the miRNA pathway. KHSRP is a single stranded nucleic acid binding protein with roles in transcription and mRNA decay, and it is also a component of the Drosha-DGCR8 complex promoting the miRNA biogenesis.MethodsThe in vivo SUMOylation assay using the Ni2+-NTA affinity pulldown or immunoprecipitation (IP) and the in vitro E.coli-based SUMOylation assay were used to analyze SUMOylation of KHSRP. Nuclear/Cytosol fractionation assay and immunofluorescent staining were used to observe the localization of KHSRP. High-throughput miRNA sequencing, quantantive RT-PCR and RNA immunoprecipitation assay (RIP) were employed to determine the effects of KHSRP SUMO1 modification on the miRNA biogenesis. The soft-agar colony formation, migration, vasculogenic mimicry (VM) and three-dimensional (3D) cell culture assays were performed to detect the phenotypes of tumor cells in vitro, and the xenograft tumor model in mice was conducted to verify that SUMO1 modification of KHSRP regulated tumorigenesis in vivo.ResultsKHSRP is modified by SUMO1 at the major site K87, and this modification can be increased upon the microenvironmental hypoxia while reduced by the treatment with growth factors. SUMO1 modification of KHSRP inhibits its interaction with the pri-miRNA/Drosha-DGCR8 complex and probably increases its translocation from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Consequently, SUMO1 modification of KHSRP impairs the processing step of pre-miRNAs from pri-miRNAs which especially harbor short G-rich stretches in their terminal loops (TL), resulting in the downregulation of a subset of TL-G-Rich miRNAs such as let-7 family and consequential tumorigenesis.ConclusionsOur data demonstrate how the miRNA biogenesis pathway is connected to tumorigenesis and cancer progression through the reversible SUMO1 modification of KHSRP.


Oncogene | 2018

Acetylation of AGO2 promotes cancer progression by increasing oncogenic miR-19b biogenesis

Hailong Zhang; Yanli Wang; Jinzhuo Dou; Yanmin Guo; Jianfeng He; Lian Li; Xiaojia Liu; Ran Chen; Rong Deng; Jian Huang; Ruiyu Xie; Xian Zhao; Jianxiu Yu

Argonaute2 (AGO2) is an effector of small RNA mediated gene silencing. Increasing evidence show that post-translational modifications of AGO2 can change miRNA activity at specific or global levels. Among the six mature miRNAs that are encoded by miR-17-92, miR-19b1 is the most powerful to exert the oncogenic properties of the entire cluster. Here we identify that AGO2 can be acetylated by P300/CBP and deacetylated by HDAC7, and that acetylation occurs at three sites K720, K493, and K355. Mutation of K493R/K720R, but not K355R at AGO2, inhibits miR-19b biogenesis. We demonstrate that acetylation of AGO2 specifically increases its recruiting pre-miR-19b1 to form the miPDC (miRNA precursor deposit complex), thereby to enhance miR-19b maturation. The motif UGUGUG in the terminal-loop of pre-miR-19b1, as a specific processing feature that is recognized and bound by acetylated AGO2, is essential for the assembly of miRISC (miRNA-induced silencing complex) loading complex. Analyses on public clinical data, xenograft mouse models, and IHC and ISH staining of lung cancer tissues, further confirm that the high levels of both AGO2 acetylation and miR-19b correlate with poor prognosis in lung cancer patients. Our finding reveals a novel function of AGO2 acetylation in increasing oncogenic miR-19b biogenesis and suggests that modulation of AGO2 acetylation has potential clinical implications.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2018

Sumoylation of EphB1 Suppresses Neuroblastoma Tumorigenesis via Inhibiting PKCγ Activation

Qin Chen; Rong Deng; Xian Zhao; Haihua Yuan; Hailong Zhang; Jinzhuo Dou; Ran Chen; Hui Jin; Yanli Wang; Jian Huang; Jianxiu Yu

Background/Aims: An increasing number of studies have linked erythropoietin-producing hepatocellular carcinoma (Eph) family receptor tyrosine kinases to cancer progression. However, little knowledge is available about the regulation of their functions in cancer. Methods: SUMOylation was analyzed by performing Ni2+-NTA pull-down assay and immunoprecipitation. Cell proliferation, anchorage-independent growth, and tumorigenesis in vivo were examined by cell counting kit-8, soft agar colony formation assay, and a xenograft tumor mouse model, respectively. Results: We found that EphB1 was post-translationally modified by the small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) protein at lysine residue 785. Analysis of wild-type EphB1 and SUMOylation-deficient EphB1 K785R mutant revealed that SUMOylation of EphB1 suppressed cell proliferation, anchorage-independent cell growth, and xenograft tumor growth. Mechanistic study showed that SUMOylation of EphB1 repressed activation of its downstream signaling molecule PKCγ, and consequently inhibited tumorigenesis. A reciprocal regulatory loop between PKCγ and SUMOylation of EphB1 was also characterized. Conclusion: Our findings identify SUMO1 as a novel key regulator of EphB1-mediated tumorigenesis.

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Xian Zhao

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Yanli Wang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Jianxiu Yu

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Hailong Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Jian Huang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Qin Chen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Changhong Zhu

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Jinzhuo Dou

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Cheng Chen

Second Military Medical University

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Haihua Yuan

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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