Long noncoding RNA RGMB-AS1 indicates a poor prognosis and modulates cell proliferation, migration and invasion in lung adenocarcinoma

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Abstract

Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. It is a complex disease involving multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations. The development of transcriptomics revealed the important role of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in lung cancer occurrence and development. Here, microarray analysis of lung adenocarcinoma tissues showed the abnormal expression of lncRNA RGMB-AS1. However, the role of lncRNA RGMB-AS1 in lung adenocarcinoma remains largely unknown.We showed that upregulation of lncRNA RGMB-AS1 was significantly correlated with differentiation, TNM stage, and lymph node metastasis. In lung adenocarcinoma cells, downregulation of lncRNA RGMBAS1 inhibited cell proliferation, migration, invasion, and caused cell cycle arrest at the G1/ G0 phase. In vivo experiments showed that lncRNA RGMB-AS1 downregulation significantly suppressed the growth of lung adenocarcinoma. The expression of lncRNA RGMBAS1 was inversely correlated with that of repulsive guidance molecule b (RGMB) in lung adenocarcinoma tissues, and UCSC analysis and fluorescence detection assay indicated that lncRNA RGMB-AS1 may be involved in the development of human lung adenocarcinoma by regulating RGMB expression though exon2 of RGMB. In summary, our findings indicate that lncRNA RGMB-AS1 may play an important role in lung adenocarcinoma and may serve as a potential therapeutic target.

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Li, P., Zhang, G., Li, J., Yang, R., Chen, S., Wu, S., … Zhao, G. (2016, March 1). Long noncoding RNA RGMB-AS1 indicates a poor prognosis and modulates cell proliferation, migration and invasion in lung adenocarcinoma. PLOS ONE. Public Library of Science. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0150790

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