Rab35 drives the malignant progression of endometrial carcinoma by regulating the nuclear translocation of β-catenin

Eryan Yang & Yingmei Wang et al. · 2026-02-26

Endometrial carcinoma (EC) is a common malignancy of the female reproductive system. Rab35 is widely recognized as an oncogenic driver and has been implicated in the progression of various malignant tumors. However, its regulatory mechanism and pathobiological roles in EC remain unclear. Rab35 expression in EC was systematically profiled via integrative analysis of clinical endometrial specimens and multi-omics databases (CPTAC and GEO). The association between clinical prognosis and Rab35 expression was examined using Kaplan-Meier analysis. Mechanistic investigations included transwell assays, western blotting, and immunofluorescence in Rab35-overexpressing and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated Rab35-knockout EC cells. A mouse xenograft tumor model was established to confirm the effects of Rab35 in vivo. The Rab35 content increased gradually from normal endometrium to atypical hyperplastic endometrium to EC. Moreover, the findings indicated that elevated Rab35 expression was significantly associated with advanced disease characteristics and poor overall survival in patients with EC. In addition, Rab35 enhanced the migratory and invasive nature of EC cells. The expression of Rab35 was inversely linked to that of the β-catenin destruction complex-related proteins Axin-1 and GSK3β, leading to the increased nuclear translocation of β-catenin in EC cells. Animal experiments further verified that Rab35 augmented EC progression by regulating the nuclear translocation of β-catenin. The study revealed that high expression of Rab35 was strongly correlated with EC progression and a poor clinical outcome. Furthermore, Rab35 promoted EC cell metastasis by accelerating the nuclear translocation of β-catenin. These findings suggest that Rab35 serves as a valuable biomarker and therapeutic target for EC.
TL;DR

The study revealed that high expression of Rab35 was strongly correlated with EC progression and a poor clinical outcome, and suggested that Rab35 serves as a valuable biomarker and therapeutic target for EC.

AI-generated by Semantic Scholar

Authors
Eryan Yang, Yindan Wang, Wenxin Mao, Tiaoxia Cui, Meiyue Li, Shuangshuang Zhao, Jingying Zhang, Ye Yan, Yuanyuan Chen, Wenyan Tian, Yingmei Wang