Browsing by Author "Ekin, U."
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Item Open Access Differential expression of full-length and NH2 terminally truncated FAM134B isoforms in normal physiology and cancer(NLM (Medline), 2020-12-14) Keleş, U.; İşcan, E.; Yilmaz, H. E.; Karakülah, G.; Suner, A.; Bal, E.; Çavga, Ayşe Derya; Taşdemir, Nilgün; Ekin, U.; Mutlu, Z.; Kahyaoğlu, S.; Serdar, M. A.; Atabey, N.; Öztürk, M.Selective autophagy of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), namely ER-phagy, is mediated by ER-localized receptors, which are recognized and sequestered by GABARAP/LC3B-decorated phagophores and transferred to lysosomes for degradation. Being one such receptor, FAM134B plays critical roles in cellular processes such as protein quality control and neuronal survival. FAM134B has also been associated with different cancers, although its exact role remains elusive. We report here that the FAM134B gene encodes not one but at least two different protein isoforms: the full-length and the NH2 terminally truncated forms. Their relative expression shows extreme variation, both within normal tissues and among cancer types. Expression of full-length FAM134B is restricted to the brain, testis, spleen, and prostate. In contrast, NH2 terminally truncated FAM134B is dominant in the heart, skeletal muscle, kidney, pancreas, and liver. We compared wild-type and knockout mice to study the role of the Fam134b gene in starvation. NH2 terminally truncated FAM134B-2 was induced in the liver, skeletal muscle, and heart but not in the pancreas and stomach following starvation. Upon starvation, Fam134b-/- mice differed from wild-type mice by less weight loss and less hyperaminoacidemic and hypocalcemic response but increased levels of serum albumin, total serum proteins, and α-amylase. Interestingly, either NH2 terminally truncated FAM134B or both isoforms were downregulated in liver, lung, and colon cancers. In contrast, upregulation was observed in stomach and chromophobe kidney cancers.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We reported tissues expressing FAM134B-2 such as the kidney, muscle, heart, and pancreas, some of which exhibit stimulated expression upon nutrient starvation. We also demonstrated the effect of Fam134b deletion during ad libitum and starvation conditions. Resistance to weight loss and hypocalcemia, accompanied by an increase in serum albumin and α-amylase levels, indicate critical roles of Fam134b in physiology. Furthermore, the differential expression of FAM134B isoforms was shown to be significantly dysregulated in human cancers.Item Open Access Evaluation of ATAD2 as a potential target in hepatocellular carcinoma(Springer, 2021-11-05) Gürsoy Yüzügüllü, Özge; Ekin, U.; Özen, C.; Korhan, P.; Bağırsakcı, E.; Yılmaz, F.; Uzuner, H.; Alotaibi, H.; Kırmızıbayrak, P. B.; Atabey, N.; Karakülah, G.; Öztürk, M.; Yüzügüllü, HalukPurpose Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death worldwide with lack of effec-tive systemic chemotherapy. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the value of ATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 2 (ATAD2) as a biomarker and potential therapeutic target for HCC.Methods The expression of ATAD2 was tested in different HCC patient cohorts by immunohistochemistry and comparative transcriptional analysis. The co-expression of ATAD2 and proliferation markers was compared during liver regeneration and malignancy with different bioinformatics tools. The cellular effects of ATAD2 inactivation in liver malignancy was tested on cell cycle, apoptosis, and colony formation ability as well as tumor formation using RNA interference. The genes affected by ATAD2 inactivation in three different HCC cell lines were identified by global gene expression profiling and bioinformatics tools.Results ATAD2 overexpression is closely correlated with HCC tumor stage. There was gradual increase from dysplasia, well-differentiated and poorly-differentiated HCC, respectively. We also observed transient upregulation of ATAD2 expres-sion during rat liver regeneration in parallel to changes in Ki-67 expression. ATAD2 knockdown resulted in apoptosis and decreased cell survival in vitro and decreased tumor formation in some HCC cell lines. However, three other HCC cell lines tested were not affected. Similarly, gene expression response to ATAD2 inactivation in different HCC cell lines was highly heterogeneous.Conclusions ATAD2 is a potential proliferation marker for liver regeneration and HCC. It may also serve as a therapeutic target despite heterogeneous response of malignant cells.