Solute carrier family 12 member 8 impacts the biological behaviors of breast carcinoma cells by activating TLR/NLR signaling pathway

10Citations
Citations of this article
8Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

This study aimed to understand the expression of solute carrier family 12 member 8 (SLC12A8) in breast carcinoma and its biological functions, as well as its effect on the Toll-like receptor /NOD-like receptor (TLR/NLR) signaling pathway. The expression of SLC12A8 was analyzed using the public RNA sequencing dataset from TCGA database and the two datasets from Oncomine database. The former dataset was also used to evaluate the prognostic value of SLC12A8 in breast carcinoma. Real-time qPCR and western blot were applied to measure relative expression of SLC12A8. Functionally, the effect of SLC12A8 on the cells proliferation and motion was studied using cell counting kit 8 and Transwell assays respectively. Mechanistic studies were conducted using Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) and confirmed by western blot. As a result, SLC12A8 was upregulated in breast carcinoma, and high levels of SLC12A8 led to a poorer prognosis and can be regarded as an independent prognosticator for patients with breast carcinoma. Functional experiments demonstrated that SLC12A8-knockdown suppressed while SLC12A8-overexpression elevated the viability, invasiveness and motility of breast carcinoma cells. Furthermore, GSEA indicated that high SLC12A8 was positively correlated with TLR/NLR signaling pathway. Silencing SLC12A8 significantly reduced the protein expression of TLR/NLR-related markers, whereas overexpression of SLC12A8 caused an elevation on the protein expression of these markers. All these data suggested that SLC12A8 plays a promoting effect on the cells viability, invasiveness and motility in breast carcinoma by activating TLR/NLR signaling pathway.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Li, L. W., Xia, J., Cui, R. T., & Kong, B. (2021). Solute carrier family 12 member 8 impacts the biological behaviors of breast carcinoma cells by activating TLR/NLR signaling pathway. Cytotechnology, 73(1), 23–34. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10616-020-00439-y

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free