Detection of a long non-coding RNA (CCAT1) in living cells and human adenocarcinoma of colon tissues using FIT–PNA molecular beacons
Author(s)
Date
2014-09-28Source Title
Cancer Letters
Print ISSN
0304-3835
Publisher
Elsevier Ireland Ltd.
Volume
352
Issue
1
Pages
90 - 96
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
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Abstract
Although the function and mechanism of action of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA) is still not completely
known, studies have shown their potential role in the control of gene expression and regulation, in cellular proliferation and invasiveness at the transcriptional level via multiple mechanisms. Recently, colon
cancer associated transcript 1 (CCAT1) lncRNA was found to be expressed in colorectal cancer (CRC)
tumors but not in normal tissue. This study aimed to study the ability of a CCAT1-specific peptide nucleic
acid (PNA) based molecular beacons (TO-PNA-MB) to serve as a diagnostic probe for in vitro, ex vivo, and
in situ (human colon biopsies) detection of CRC. The data showed enhanced fluorescence upon in vitro
hybridization to RNA extracted from CCAT1 expressing cells (HT-29, SW-480) compared to control cells
(SK-Mel-2). Uptake of TO-PNA-MBs into cells was achieved by covalently attaching cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) to the TO-PNA-MB probes. In situ hybridization of selected TO-PNA-MB in human CRC specimens was shown to detect CCAT1 expression in all (4/4) subjects with pre-cancerous adenomas, and in
all (8/8) patients with invasive adenocarcinoma (penetrating the bowel wall) tumors. The results showed
that CCAT1 TO-PNA-MB is a powerful diagnostic tool for the specific identification of CRC, suggesting that
with the aid of an appropriate pharmaceutical vehicle, real time in vivo imaging is feasible. TO-PNA-MB
may enable identifying occult metastatic disease during surgery, or differentiating in real time in vivo
imaging, between benign and malignant lesions.