Investigator

Malachi Griffith

Professor · Washington University in St. Louis, Medicine (Oncology)

About

MGMalachi Griffith
Papers(1)
Splicing factor SF3B1…
Collaborators(1)
Ramakrishna Kommagani
Institutions(1)
Taylor Family Institu…

Papers

Splicing factor SF3B1 promotes endometrial cancer progression via regulating KSR2 RNA maturation

AbstractAlthough endometrial cancer is the most common cancer of the female reproductive tract, we have little understanding of what controls endometrial cancer beyond the transcriptional effects of steroid hormones such as estrogen. As a result, we have limited therapeutic options for the ~62,000 women diagnosed with endometrial cancer each year in the United States. Here, in an attempt to identify new prognostic and therapeutic targets, we focused on a new area for this cancer—alternative mRNA splicing—and investigated whether splicing factor, SF3B1, plays an important role in endometrial cancer pathogenesis. Using a tissue microarray, we found that human endometrial tumors expressed more SF3B1 protein than non-cancerous tissues. Furthermore, SF3B1 knockdown reduced in vitro proliferation, migration, and invasion of the endometrial cancer cell lines Ishikawa and AN3CA. Similarly, the SF3B1 inhibitor, Pladienolide-B (PLAD-B), reduced the Ishikawa and AN3CA cell proliferation and invasion in vitro. Moreover, PLAD-B reduced tumor growth in an orthotopic endometrial cancer mouse model. Using RNA-Seq approach, we identified ~2000 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) with SF3B1 knockdown in endometrial cancer cells. Additionally, alternative splicing (AS) events analysis revealed that SF3B1 depletion led to alteration in multiple categories of AS events including alternative exon skipping (ES), transcript start site usage (TSS), and transcript termination site (TTS) usage. Subsequently, bioinformatics analysis showed KSR2 as a potential candidate for SF3B1-mediated functions in endometrial cancer. Specifically, loss of SF3B1 led to decrease in KSR2 expression, owing to reduced maturation of KSR2 pre-mRNA to a mature RNA. Importantly, we found rescuing the KSR2 expression with SF3B1 knockdown partially restored the cell growth of endometrial cancer cells. Taken together, our data suggest that SF3B1 plays a crucial oncogenic role in the tumorigenesis of endometrial cancer and hence may support the development of SF3B1 inhibitors to treat this disease.

154Works
1Papers
1Collaborators

Positions

2025–

Professor

Washington University in St. Louis · Medicine (Oncology)

2014–

Assistant Director

Washington University in Saint Louis · McDonnell Genome Institute

2011–

Workshop Instructor

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory · Courses

2011–

Workshop instructor

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research · Canadian Bioinformatics Workshops

2020–

Associate Professor

Washington University in St Louis · Medicine (Oncology)

2011–

Assistant Professor

Washington University in St Louis · Genetics

2010–

Postdoctoral Fellow

British Columbia Cancer Agency · Genome Sciences Center

2004–

PhD Candidate, Teaching Assistant

University of British Columbia · Medical Genetics

2003–

Computational Biologist

British Columbia Cancer Agency · Genome Sciences Center

2000–

Research Assistant / Research Technician 3

University of Manitoba · Biochemistry and Medical Genetics

2000–

Laboratory Demonstrator

University of Winnipeg · Biology

2002–

Web and Database Application Developer

University of Winnipeg · Library Sciences

1996–

Research Student

Atomic Energy of Canada Limited · Electron Accelerator Division

Education

2009

PhD

University of British Columbia · Medical Genetics

2005

PhD

Simon Fraser University · Bioinformatics

2003

University of Winnipeg · Business Computing

2002

B.Sc. (Honors)

University of Winnipeg · Biochemistry, Biology (double major)

Country

US

Keywords
Genomics Bioinformatics Cancer Informatics Immunogenomics Programming Analysis NGS SingleCell