Reciprocal modulation of long noncoding RNA EMS and p53 regulates tumorigenesis

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Abstract

P53 plays a central role in tumor suppression. Emerging evidence suggests long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) as an important class of regulatory molecules that control the p53 signaling. Here, we report that the oncogenic lncRNA E2F1 messenger RNA (mRNA) stabilizing factor (EMS) and p53 mutually repress each other's expression. EMS is negatively regulated by p53. As a direct transcriptional repression target of p53, EMS is surprisingly shown to inhibit p53 expression. EMS associates with cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein 2 (CPEB2) and thus, disrupts the CPEB2-p53 mRNA interaction. This disassociation attenuates CPEB2-mediated p53 mRNA polyadenylation and suppresses p53 translation. Functionally, EMS is able to exert its oncogenic activities, at least partially, via the CPEB2-p53 axis. Together, these findings reveal a double-negative feedback loop between p53 and EMS, through which p53 is finely controlled. Our study also demonstrates a critical role for EMS in promoting tumorigenesis via the negative regulation of p53.

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Wang, C., Yang, Y., Wu, X., Li, J., Liu, K., Fang, D., … Mei, Y. (2022). Reciprocal modulation of long noncoding RNA EMS and p53 regulates tumorigenesis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(3). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2111409119

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