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Series GSE39943 Query DataSets for GSE39943
Status Public on Jan 23, 2014
Title Aberrant choline metabolism in epithelial ovarian cancer: relevance of choline kinase activity and expression
Organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary Detection of the abnormal phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) metabolism in EOC by analysis of magnetic resonance profile (MRS), showed a significant increase of PCho content in EOC cells as compared with non tumoral counterparts associated with activation of choline kinase (ChoK), the enzyme responsible for PCho production following choline phosphorylation in the PtdCho biosynthetic pathway (Kennedy’s pathway). The α-isoform of ChoK has an essential role in growth control and signal transduction and it has been implicated in the carcinogenic process. Aim of the study is the evaluation of the biological relevance of ChoK expression and activity to define its possible role as a non-invasively detectable EOC biomarker and druggable target. We specifically silenced ChoKα expression by transient RNA interference in two different EOC cell lines and evaluated the biological effects related to metabolic profiles, cell proliferation, cell cycle regulation and alteration of global gene expression to possibly identify new pathways implicated in altered choline metabolism. Following ChoKα silencing we observed a 70% reduction of mRNA and protein expression with a similar reduction in PCho accumulation as assessed by HMRS analysis. The ChoKα silencing was accompanied by 20% inhibition of cell growth and similar percentage of cells blocked in the G1-phase of cell cycle. No alteration in cell morphology and modulation of the main survival signaling pathways (PI3K and MAPK-related signaling) were observed. By gene expression analysis we found 476 differentially expressed genes (p< 0.01; FDR 25%) in silenced cells. By transcriptome analysis of CHKA silenced cells as compared to controls, among the most relevant co-repressed genes we found CyclinA, related to regulation of cell cycle progression, and cytokines genes (IL-6 and IL-8) related to inflammation and EOC aggressiveness. Acyl-CoA synthetase medium-chain family member 3 (ACSM3), phosphatidic acid phosphatase type 2 (PPAP2A) and Osteoprotegerin were among the most up-regulated genes. All co-modulated genes have been validated by RTqPCR also in independent biological replicates. Ingenuity System Pathways Analysis (IPA) identified a network of molecules most significantly affected by CHKA silencing whose main functions is related to cell morphology cellular assembly and organization, cellular function and maintenance. Also, the cellular functions predicted to be mostly affected by silencing were cellular movement and cell death that are expected to be respectively decreased and increased in silenced cells.
 
Overall design a total of 12 samples were analyzed: Two EOC cell line SKOV3 and INTOV11 were transiently silenced with unrelated or CHKA-specific siRNA pool. Three independent experiment were run for each cell line.
 
Contributor(s) De Cecco L, Bagnoli M
Citation(s) 24281000
Submission date Aug 07, 2012
Last update date Aug 16, 2018
Contact name Loris De Cecco
E-mail(s) loris.dececco@istitutotumori.mi.it
Organization name IRCSS Istituto Nazionale Tumori
Street address via Venezian 1
City Milan
ZIP/Postal code 20133
Country Italy
 
Platforms (1)
GPL6947 Illumina HumanHT-12 V3.0 expression beadchip
Samples (12)
GSM982085 SKOV3 ctrl a
GSM982086 SKOV3 ctrl b
GSM982087 SKOV3 ctrl c
Relations
BioProject PRJNA172137

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE39943_RAW.tar 6.2 Mb (http)(custom) TAR
GSE39943_non-normalized.txt.gz 3.9 Mb (ftp)(http) TXT
Processed data included within Sample table

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