1. Academic Validation
  2. MEX3A suppresses proliferation and EMT via inhibiting Akt signaling pathway in cervical cancer

MEX3A suppresses proliferation and EMT via inhibiting Akt signaling pathway in cervical cancer

  • Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Apr 15;11(4):1446-1462.
Yichi Xu 1 Shuya Pan 1 Hong Chen 1 Hongfei Qian 1 Zhiwei Wang 1 Xueqiong Zhu 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Center for Uterine Cancer Diagnosis & Therapy Research of Zhejiang Province, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University Wenzhou, People's Republic of China.
PMID: 33948367
Abstract

MEX3A, one member of the human MEX3 gene family, exerts different effects on a variety of human Cancer cells. However, the biological functions and regulatory mechanism have not been explored in cervical Cancer. In our study, we used multiple approaches to determine the functions and underlying molecular mechanism of MEX3A in cervical tumorigenesis, including CCK-8 assay, BrdU assay, FACS for cell cycle and Apoptosis, wound healing assay, Transwell migration and invasion assays, immunohistochemistry (IHC) assay, Transfection, real-time RT-PCR and Western blotting analysis. IHC results showed that the expression levels of MEX3A were decreased in cervical Cancer patients with advanced clinical stages and lymph node involvement. Moreover, upregulation of MEX3A attenuated cell proliferation, migration and invasion and induced cell cycle arrest at G0/G1 phase in human cervical Cancer cells, whereas knockdown of MEX3A exhibited the opposite effects. Mechanistically, MEX3A exerted its tumor suppressive functions via inactivation of Akt signaling pathway and inhibiting epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). Importantly, Akt activation by its activator SC79 reversed the biological functions of MEX3A overexpression. Furthermore, MEX3A inhibited tumor growth in xenograft models. Overall, our investigation suggested that MEX3A participated in antitumor activity in cervical Cancer by inhibition of the Akt signaling pathway and EMT. Hence, targeting MEX3A might have a therapeutic potential to treat cervical Cancer.

Keywords

Akt; EMT; MEX3A; cervical cancer; invasion; proliferation.

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