Decreased RIG-I expression is associated with poor prognosis and promotes cell invasion in human gastric cancer

作者:Chen, Lujun; Feng, Jun; Wu, Shaoxian; Xu, Bin; Zhou, You; Wu, Changping; Jiang, Jingting*
来源:Cancer Cell International, 2018, 18(1): 144.
DOI:10.1186/s12935-018-0639-3

摘要

Background: Retinoic acid-induced protein I (RIG-I), known as a cytoplastic pattern recognition receptor, can recognize exogenous viral RNAs, and then initiate immune response. Recently, numerous studies also showed that RIG-I play an important role in oncogenesis and cancer progression as well. As of now, the expression pattern and the role of RIG-I in gastric cancer still remain largely unexplored. In this study, we investigated the clinical associations of RIG-I expression in human gastric cancer tissues and further explore its important contribution in the regulation of malignant phenotype of gastric cancer cells. @@@ Methods: Immunohistochemistry was performed to study the correlation between patients' clinical parameters and RIG-I expression in gastric cancer tissues. Knockdown of RIG-I was achieved by RNAi technology to examine the contribution of RIG-I in the regulation of biological functions in the cell lines of human gastric cancer. The Affymetrix GeneChip was performed to figure out the differential gene expression profile between RIG-I wild type and RIG-I knockdown cell lines of gastric cancer. @@@ Results: Immunohistochemistry result demonstrated that the expression of RIG-I in gastric cancer tissues significantly correlated with pathological stage and patients' prognoses. Furthermore, decreased RIG-I expression in human gastric cancer cell lines could significantly increase the cell migration, cell viability, and the ratio of cells in G2/M phase. Our microarray analysis also revealed that the differentially expressed gene profiles were enriched in related signal pathways or biological processes in KEGG or GO analysis respectively. @@@ Conclusions: Our present findings showed that the decreased RIG-I expression significantly correlated with patients' prognoses, and such down-regulation could promote the cell invasion in this malignancy.