Investigator

Yunlong Liu

Professor · Indiana University, School of Medicine

YLYunlong Liu
Papers(1)
Targeting Ovarian Can…
Collaborators(10)
Ali OzesAnirban K. MitraFang FangHeather M. O'HaganHongyu GaoJi WangJun WanKenneth P. NephewShu ZhangWeini Wang
Institutions(6)
Indiana University Me…Indiana UniversityIndiana University Sc…Karolinska InstitutetIndiana University Sc…Shanghai Jiao Tong Un…

Papers

Targeting Ovarian Cancer Stem Cells by Dual Inhibition of the Long Noncoding RNA HOTAIR and Lysine Methyltransferase EZH2

Abstract The persistence of cancer stem cells (CSC) is believed to contribute to resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy and disease relapse in ovarian cancer, the fifth leading cause of cancer-related death among US women. HOXC transcript antisense RNA (HOTAIR) is a long, noncoding RNA (lncRNA) overexpressed in high-grade serous ovarian cancer and linked to chemoresistance. However, HOTAIR impacts chromatin dynamics in ovarian CSCs. Oncogenic lncRNA’s contributions to drug-resistant disease are incompletely understood. Here, we generated HOTAIR knockout (KO) high-grade serous ovarian cancer cell lines using paired CRISPR guide RNA design to investigate the function of HOTAIR. We show the loss of HOTAIR function resensitized ovarian cancer cells to platinum treatment and decreased the population of ovarian CSCs. Furthermore, HOTAIR KO inhibited the development of stemness-related phenotypes, including spheroid formation ability and expression of key stemness-associated genes ALDH1A1, NOTCH3, SOX9, and PROM1. HOTAIR KO altered the cellular transcriptome and chromatin accessibility landscape of multiple oncogenic-associated genes and pathways, including the NF-kB pathway. HOTAIR functions as an oncogene by recruiting enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) to catalyze H3K27 trimethylation to suppress downstream tumor suppressor genes, and it was of interest to inhibit both HOTAIR and EZH2. In vivo, combining a HOTAIR inhibitor with an EZH2 inhibitor and platinum chemotherapy decreased tumor formation and increased survival. These results suggest a key role for HOTAIR in ovarian CSCs and malignant potential. Targeting HOTAIR in combination with epigenetic therapies may represent a therapeutic strategy to ameliorate ovarian cancer progression and resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy.

50Works
1Papers
13Collaborators

Positions

2006–

Professor

Indiana University · School of Medicine