HOTAIR, a cell cycle-associated long noncoding RNA and a strong predictor of survival, is preferentially expressed in classical and mesenchymal glioma

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Abstract

Background. Long noncodingRNAHox transcript antisense intergenic RNA (HOTAIR) has been characterized as a negative prognostic factor in breast and colon cancer patients. The clinical significance and function of HOTAIR in glioma remains unclear. Methods. We analyzed the clinical significance of HOTAIR in 3 different glioma cohorts with gene expression data, including correlation with tumor grade, prognosis, and molecular subtype. The function of HOTAIR in glioma was explored by performing gene set enrichment analysis and in vitro and in vivo experiments. Results. HOTAIR expression was closely associated with glioma grade and poor prognosis. Multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed thatHOTAIR was an independent prognostic factor in glioblastoma multiformepatients.HOTAIRexpressioncorrelatedwith gliomamolecular subtype, including those of The Cancer Genome Atlas.HOTAIR was preferentially expressed in the classical and mesenchymal subtypes compared with the neural and proneural subtypes. A gene set enrichment analysis designed to show gene set differences between patients with high and low HOTAIR expression indicated that HOTAIR expression was associated with gene sets involved in cell cycle progression. HOTAIR reduction induced colony formation suppression, cell cycle G0/ G1 arrest, and orthotopic tumor growth inhibition. Conclusion. Our data establish that HOTAIR is an important long noncoding RNA that primarily serves as a prognostic factor for glioma patient survival, as well as a biomarker for identifying glioma molecular subtypes, a critical regulator of cell cycle progression. © The Author(s) 2013.

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Zhang, J. X., Han, L., Bao, Z. S., Wang, Y. Y., Chen, L. Y., Yan, W., … Kang, C. S. (2013). HOTAIR, a cell cycle-associated long noncoding RNA and a strong predictor of survival, is preferentially expressed in classical and mesenchymal glioma. Neuro-Oncology, 15(12), 1595–1603. https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/not131

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