Investigator

Arkadiusz M. Bonna

CTO and Co-Founder · Triple Helical Peptides Ltd

AMBArkadiusz M. Bonna
Papers(2)
The Clinical Signific…A Multi-Faceted Analy…
Collaborators(5)
Lukasz Michal SzafronBianka SwiderskaLaura Aleksandra Szaf…Roksana Iwanicka-Nowi…Tymon Rubel
Institutions(5)
Unknown InstitutionMaria Sklodowska-Curi…Institute of Biochemi…Institute of Biochemi…Warsaw University of …

Papers

The Clinical Significance of CRNDE Gene Methylation, Polymorphisms, and CRNDEP Micropeptide Expression in Ovarian Tumors

CRNDE is an oncogene expressed as a long non-coding RNA. However, our team previously reported that the CRNDE gene also encodes a micropeptide, CRNDEP. The amino acid sequence of CRNDEP has recently been revealed by other researchers, too. This study aimed to investigate genetic alterations within the CRNDEP-coding region of the CRNDE gene, methylation profiling of this gene, and CRNDEP expression analysis. All investigations were performed on clinical material from patients with ovarian tumors of diverse aggressiveness. We found that CRNDEP levels were significantly elevated in highly aggressive tumors compared to benign neoplasms. Consistently, a high level of this micropeptide was a negative, independent, prognostic, and predictive factor in high-grade ovarian cancer (hgOvCa) patients. The cancer-promoting role of CRNDE(P), shown in our recent study, was also supported by genetic and epigenetic results obtained herein, revealing no CRNDEP-disrupting mutations in any clinical sample. Moreover, in borderline ovarian tumors (BOTS), but not in ovarian cancers, the presence of a single nucleotide polymorphism in CRNDE, rs115515594, significantly increased the risk of recurrence. Consistently, in BOTS only, the same genetic variant was highly overrepresented compared to healthy individuals. We also discovered that hypomethylation of CRNDE is associated with increased aggressiveness of ovarian tumors. Accordingly, hypomethylation of this gene’s promoter/first exon correlated with hgOvCa resistance to chemotherapy, but only in specimens with accumulation of the TP53 tumor suppressor protein. Taken together, these results contribute to a better understanding of the role of CRNDE(P) in tumorigenesis and potentially may lead to improvements in screening, diagnosis, and treatment of ovarian neoplasms.

A Multi-Faceted Analysis Showing CRNDE Transcripts and a Recently Confirmed Micropeptide as Important Players in Ovarian Carcinogenesis

CRNDE is considered an oncogene expressed as long non-coding RNA. Our previous paper is the only one reporting CRNDE as a micropeptide-coding gene. The amino acid sequence of this micropeptide (CRNDEP) has recently been confirmed by other researchers. This study aimed at providing a mass spectrometry (MS)-based validation of the CRNDEP sequence and an investigation of how the differential expression of CRNDE(P) influences the metabolism and chemoresistance of ovarian cancer (OvCa) cells. We also assessed cellular localization changes of CRNDEP, looked for its protein partners, and bioinformatically evaluated its RNA-binding capacities. Herein, we detected most of the CRNDEP sequence by MS. Moreover, our results corroborated the oncogenic role of CRNDE, portraying it as the gene impacting carcinogenesis at the stages of DNA transcription and replication, affecting the RNA metabolism, and stimulating the cell cycle progression and proliferation, with CRNDEP being detected in the centrosomes of dividing cells. We also showed that CRNDEP is located in nucleoli and revealed interactions of this micropeptide with p54, an RNA helicase. Additionally, we proved that high CRNDE(P) expression increases the resistance of OvCa cells to treatment with microtubule-targeted cytostatics. Furthermore, altered CRNDE(P) expression affected the activity of the microtubular cytoskeleton and the formation of focal adhesion plaques. Finally, according to our in silico analyses, CRNDEP is likely capable of RNA binding. All these results contribute to a better understanding of the CRNDE(P) role in OvCa biology, which may potentially improve the screening, diagnosis, and treatment of this disease.

47Works
2Papers
5Collaborators

Positions

2023–

CTO and Co-Founder

Triple Helical Peptides Ltd

2022–

Director

CambCol Ltd and CambCol Laboratories Ltd · R&D

2021–

Head of Research Laboratory

CambCol Laboratories

2018–

Lead Peptide Scientist

CambCol Laboratories

2015–

Senior Research Associate

University of Cambridge · Department of Biochemistry

2014–

Assistant Professor

Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences · Department of Biophysics

2009–

Head of Peptide Synthesis Laboratory

Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences · Department of Biophysics

Education

2009

PhD in chemistry

University of Gdańsk, Faculty of Chemistry

1999

MSc in chemistry

University of Gdańsk, Faculty of Chemistry · Department of Bioorganic Chemistry

Links & IDs
0000-0002-3957-7849

Scopus: 6504341591