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Tristetraprolin expression by keratinocytes protects against skin carcinogenesis
Assiya Assabban, … , Perry J. Blackshear, Stanislas Goriely
Assiya Assabban, … , Perry J. Blackshear, Stanislas Goriely
Published January 26, 2021
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(5):e140669. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.140669.
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Research Article Inflammation Oncology

Tristetraprolin expression by keratinocytes protects against skin carcinogenesis

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Abstract

Cancer is caused primarily by genomic alterations resulting in deregulation of gene regulatory circuits in key growth, apoptosis, or DNA repair pathways. Multiple genes associated with the initiation and development of tumors are also regulated at the level of mRNA decay, through the recruitment of RNA-binding proteins to AU-rich elements (AREs) located in their 3′-untranslated regions. One of these ARE-binding proteins, tristetraprolin (TTP; encoded by Zfp36), is consistently dysregulated in many human malignancies. Herein, using regulated overexpression or conditional ablation in the context of cutaneous chemical carcinogenesis, we show that TTP represents a critical regulator of skin tumorigenesis. We provide evidence that TTP controlled both tumor-associated inflammation and key oncogenic pathways in neoplastic epidermal cells. We identify Areg as a direct target of TTP in keratinocytes and show that EGFR signaling potentially contributed to exacerbated tumor formation. Finally, single-cell RNA-Seq analysis indicated that ZFP36 was downregulated in human malignant keratinocytes. We conclude that TTP expression by epidermal cells played a major role in the control of skin tumorigenesis.

Authors

Assiya Assabban, Ingrid Dubois-Vedrenne, Laurye Van Maele, Rosalba Salcedo, Brittany L. Snyder, Lecong Zhou, Abdulkader Azouz, Bérengère de Toeuf, Gaëlle Lapouge, Caroline La, Maxime Melchior, Muriel Nguyen, Séverine Thomas, Si Fan Wu, Wenqian Hu, Véronique Kruys, Cédric Blanpain, Giorgio Trinchieri, Cyril Gueydan, Perry J. Blackshear, Stanislas Goriely

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Figure 6

Potential direct targets of TTP in neoplastic epidermal cells.

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Potential direct targets of TTP in neoplastic epidermal cells.
Epithelia...
Epithelial cells from tumors and adjacent-treated and mock-treated skin of Zfp36ΔEP mice and their littermates were isolated for RNA-Seq analysis (n = 3). (A) Heatmap of expression levels of transcripts significantly increased or decreased for indicated groups and ARE score of tumor-specific transcripts from Zfp36ΔEP and Zfp36fl/fl samples is shown when > 2. (B) mRNA levels of sorted papilloma cells analyzed by qPCR. Levels are normalized against Actb and expressed relative to values from the Zfp36fl/fl mice, arbitrarily set to 1 (mean ± SEM, n = 7–11, pool of 3 experiments). Statistical significance (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001) was assessed by 2-tailed Mann-Whitney test. TTP, tristetraprolin; TPA; ARE, AU-rich element.

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