Ancient ubiquitous protein 1 (AUP1) is a prognostic biomarker connected with TP53 mutation and the inflamed microenvironments in glioma

Cancer Cell Int. 2023 Apr 7;23(1):62. doi: 10.1186/s12935-023-02912-y.

Abstract

Introduction: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and lethal brain tumor. The current treatment is surgical removal combined with radiotherapy and chemotherapy, Temozolomide (TMZ). However, tumors tend to develop TMZ resistance which leads to therapeutic failure. Ancient ubiquitous protein 1 (AUP1) is a protein associated with lipid metabolism, which is widely expressed on the surface of ER and Lipid droplets, involved in the degradation of misfolded proteins through autophagy. It has recently been described as a prognostic marker in renal tumors. Here, we aim to use sophisticated bioinformatics and experimental validation to characterize the AUP1's role in glioma.

Material and methods: We collected the mRNA, proteomics, and Whole-Exon-Sequencing from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) for bioinformatics analyses. The analyses included the expression difference, Kaplan-Meier-survival, COX-survival, and correlation to the clinical factors (tumor mutation burden, microsatellite instability, and driven mutant genes). Next, we validated the AUP1 protein expression using immunohistochemical staining on the 78 clinical cases and correlated them with P53 and KI67. Then, we applied GSEA analyses to identify the altered signalings and set functional experiments (including Western Blot, qPCR, BrdU, migration, cell-cycle, and RNAseq) on cell lines when supplemented with small interfering RNA targeting the AUP1 gene (siAUP1) for further validation. We integrated the single-cell sequencing and CIBERSORT analyses at the Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas (CGGA) and Glioma Longitudinal AnalySiS (GLASS) dataset to rationale the role of AUP1 in glioma.

Results: Firstly, the AUP1 is a prognostic marker, increased in the tumor component, and correlated with tumor grade in both transcriptomes and protein levels. Secondly, we found higher AUP1 associated with TP53 status, Tumor mutation burden, and increased proliferation. In the function validation, downregulated AUP1 expression merely impacted the U87MG cells' proliferation instead of altering the lipophagy activity. From the single-cell sequencing and CIBERSORT analyses at CGGA and GLASS data, we understood the AUP1 expression was affected by the tumor proliferation, stromal, and inflammation compositions, particularly the myeloid and T cells. In the longitudinal data, the AUP1 significantly dropped in the recurrent IDH wildtype astrocytoma, which might result from increased AUP1-cold components, including oligodendrocytes, endothelial cells, and pericytes.

Conclusion: According to the literature, AUP1 regulates lipophagy by stabilizing the ubiquitination of lipid droplets. However, we found no direct link between AUP1 suppression and altered autophagy activity in the functional validation. Instead, we noticed AUP1 expression associated with tumor proliferation and inflammatory status, contributed by myeloid cells and T cells. In addition, the TP53 mutations seem to play an important role here and initiate inflamed microenvironments. At the same time, EGFR amplification and Chromosome 7 gain combined 10 loss are associated with increased tumor growth related to AUP1 levels. This study taught us that AUP1 is a poorer predictive biomarker associated with tumor proliferation and could report inflamed status, potentially impacting the clinical application.

Keywords: AUP1; CGGA; CIBERSORT; GLASS; GSEA; Glioblastoma; MSI; Single-cell sequencing; TCGA; TMB; TP53.