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1 1 EGF receptor promotes prostate cancer bone metastasis by downregulating miR-1 and 2 activating TWIST1 3 4 Supplemental Information 5 Supplemental Materials and Methods 6 7 Reagents and Constructs 8 EGF was from R&D Systems (MN). Matrigel was purchased from BD Biosciences (CA) for 9 the invasion assay. miR precursors (empty vector (EV) and miR-1 precursor) and anti-miRs 10 (control and anti-miR-1) were from GeneCopoeia (MD). siRNAs (control and siEGFR) 11 were from Thermo Scientific Dharmacon ON‑TARGETplus siRNA with SMARTpool 12 Reagents (Thermo Scientific, MA). The AT-rich minimal consensus sequence (ATRS) was 13 located upstream of human primary hsa-mir-1-1 (pri-miR-1-1) and hsa-mir-1-2 (pri-miR-1-2) 14 on chromosomes 20 and 18, respectively, at GRCh37 and is listed in Supplemental Table S1. 15 The RFP reporter vectors were constructed using the Clone-it Enzyme Free Lentivectors Kit 16 (System Biosciences, CA). The human TWIST1 full-length 3’UTR reporter was constructed 17 using the psiHECKTM-2 vector (Promega, WI). The miRNA-binding site and pri-miR-1-1 18 promoter-RFP mutations were made using a Site-Directed Mutagenesis System kit 19 (Invitrogen, CA). All primers used for these constructs are listed in Supplemental Table S2. 20 All constructs were verified by a DNA sequence analysis. 21 22 Clinical Outcomes and Correlation Analyses using Human Datasets 23 We used mRNA expression data from two public human prostate cancer datasets, the 24 Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) (1) and the Cancer Genome Atlas 2 1 (TCGA). The study using the MSKCC dataset was conducted under MSKCC Institutional 2 Review Board approval on 28 normal, 151 primary, and 19 metastatic samples. Additionally, 3 miRNA expressions were determined on 111 tumors (98 primary and 13 metastasis) and 28 4 matched normal samples. The study using the TCGA dataset was under National Cancer 5 Institute, National Institutes of Health Review Board approval on 372 primary prostate 6 cancer samples from patients treated by a radical prostatectomy. These expression data were 7 log2-normalized. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) software from the Broad (2) was 8 used to assess the significance of EGFR signaling-responsive gene signatures (3,4) by the 9 normalized enrichment score (NES) and false discovery rate (FDR). Up- and downregulated 10 EGFR signaling signatures used in this study were gene profiles representing up- and 11 downregulation by activated EGFR signaling. Concordant overexpression of all genes in a 12 signature (compared to the mean expression of all genes) led to a high positive score and 13 indicated the presence of the signature in the tumor. 14 15 Real-time Reverse transcription (RT)-PCR 16 Total RNA was isolated using the mirVana PARIS RNA isolation system (Ambion, TX). 17 RT of a cDNA and miRNA PCR was performed as previously described (5). Clinical 18 samples from patients with independent prostate tumors used in the qRT-PCR analyses were 19 extracted from dissected tissues containing >70% tumor cell content. All reactions were run 20 in triplicate using primers listed in Supplemental Table S3. 21 22 Western Blot Analysis 23 Cells were lysed with RIPA buffer containing complete protease inhibitors plus the 24 phosphatase inhibitors (Roche, CA), 25 mM β‐ glycerophosphate, 10 mM sodium fluoride, 25 and 1 mM sodium vanadate, as previously described (5). Lysis of the nuclear and 26 cytoplasmic fractions was performed using the NE-PER Nuclear and Cytoplasmic 3 1 Extraction Reagent kit (Thermo Scientific, IL). Primary antibodies were incubated overnight 2 at 4 °C using dilutions listed in Supplemental Table S4. 3 4 In Vitro Growth Assay 5 Control/miR-1 precursors or the EGFR expression vector in RasB1 cells in response to EGF 6 treatment (100 ng/ml) were expressed at a density of 2x103 cells/well. Each day, one plate 7 was stained with a 0.5% crystal violet fixative solution for 15 minutes, rinsed in distilled 8 water, and allowed to air-dry. At the end of the experiment, the crystal violet was dissolved 9 by adding 100 µl of 50% ethanol containing 0.1 M sodium citrate to each well, and the 10 absorbance was quantified at a wavelength of OD 550 nm on a plate reader. 11 12 Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP) 13 ChIP assays were performed using the EZ magna ChIP A kit (Millipore, CA) with a 14 modified protocol. Cells were treated with or without EGF (100 ng/ml) for 24 hours. 15 Cultured cells (107) were cross-linked with 1% formaldehyde at room temperature for 15 16 minutes. Fixation was quenched with glycine, and cells were washed twice with cold PBS 17 containing a complete protease inhibitor (Roche, CA). Cell pellets were resuspended in cell 18 lysis buffer and incubated on ice for 15 minutes. Nuclei were collected by centrifugation at 19 104 rpm and 4 °C for 10 minutes and resuspended in nuclear lysis buffer. Chromatin was 20 sheared using a sonicator (Branson Sonifier 250, Germany) with a microtip in a 20-second 21 burst followed by 1 min of cooling on ice for a total sonication time of 5 minutes/ample. 22 This procedure resulted in DNA fragment sizes of 100~300 bp. Sheared chromatin was 23 divided to perform immunoprecipitation with a rabbit IgG antibody (Santa Cruz 24 Biotechnology, CA) or a primary antibody at 4 °C overnight. Immunoprecipitation, washing, 25 elution, reverse cross-linking, and DNA purification steps were performed according to 26 Millipore’s protocol. A qPCR was performed in triplicate with 2 µl of eluted chromatin. 4 1 ChIP antibodies and PCR primers are listed in Supplemental Table S5. 2 3 Immunohistochemical (IHC) staining 4 IHC staining was performed using TWIST1 (Millipore, MA) and phosphorylated (p)-EGFR 5 (Y1068) (Cell Signaling, MA) antibodies at respective 1:500 and 1:250 dilutions. In general, 6 unstained sections were deparaffinized and rehydrated. Antigen retrieval was performed 7 using the Target Antigen Retrieval Solution (DAKO, CA) and autoclaved for 10 minutes. 8 Endogenous peroxidase was blocked using a 3% hydrogen peroxide solution. All sections 9 were blocked with Cyto Q Background Buster Reagent (Innovex BioSciences, CA). Primary 10 antibodies were incubated overnight at 4 °C in Antibody Diluent with Background Reducing 11 Components (DAKO, CA). The secondary antibody, 1:250 HRP-labeled anti-mouse/rabbit 12 (Vector Laboratories, CA), was incubated at room temperature for 30 minutes, and bound 13 peroxidase was detected using the ABC Peroxidase Kit (Vector Laboratories, CA) and DAB 14 (DAKO, CA). All IHC slides were counterstained with hematoxylin. For histomorphometric 15 analysis of tissue sections, microscopic images were examined under 200x magnification 16 using an Axioplan microscopy system (Zeiss, NY). 17 18 Immunofluorescent (IF) Staining 19 Adherent cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) in PBS for 10 minutes, followed 20 by permeabilization with 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS for 2 minutes. Non-specific sites were 21 blocked by incubation in 2% BSA in PBS for 30 minutes. Cells were then incubated 22 overnight at 4 °C with the specified antibodies in 2% BSA/PBS. IF staining used EGFR and 23 p-EGFR (Y1068 and Y845) (Cell Signaling, MA) antibodies at 1:100 dilutions. Cells were 24 washed with PBS containing 0.1% Tween-20, incubated with Alexa-488 and/or 568 25 conjugated IgG in 2% BSA for 30 minutes at room temperature, and finally washed and 26 mounted using the anti-fade reagent, Fluoro-gel II, with DAPI. Fluorescent signals and 5 1 bright-field images were captured using an inverted and/or upright fluorescent Zeiss 2 Axioplan microscope (Zeiss, NY). 3 4 Supplemental Figure Legends 5 6 Figure S1. EGFR signaling activation is associated with reduced miR-1 expression and 7 prostate cancer progression. (A and B) GSEA showed enrichment of two prostate cancer 8 datasets, MSKCC (A) and TCGA (B), with EGFR signaling downregulation-responsive 9 genes in cancers expressing high levels of miR-1. NES, normalized enrichment score; FDR, 10 false discovery rate. (C and D) Mean expression of miR-1 for signatures separated on the 11 basis of up- and downregulated EGFR signaling-responsive genes in the MSKCC (C) and 12 TCGA (D) datasets. 13 14 Figure S2. Effects of miR-1 expression in response to EGFR signaling. (A) Endogenous 15 levels of miR-1 in a panel of prostate cancer cell lines. * vs. RasB1. (B) Relative EGFR 16 expression levels in various prostate cancer cell lines. * vs. LNCap. (C) Cellular migration 17 and invasion of LNCap and 22Rv1 cells following EGF treatment for 6 hours and then 18 fixation and staining with a 0.5% crystal violet fixative solution. (D) Representative 19 histological images of bone metastases in mice from RasB1/miR-1 (miR-1/EV), and 20 EGFR-rescued RasB1/miR-1 (miR-1/EGFR) cells. Bone metastases are indicated by arrows 21 and red dotted lines. 22 23 Figure S3. Nuclear EGFR translocation and direct binding to the pri-miR-1-1 promoter. (A) 24 IF staining of RasB1 and PC3 cells with an antibody for EGFR following EGF and CI1033 25 treatment. Scale bars represent 50 µm. (B) IHC staining of FFPE cell blocks of RasB1 and 26 PC3 cells with an antibody for p-EGFR (Y1068) following EGF and CI1033 treatment. (C) 6 1 The intensity of total EGFR was normalized to the internal control, histone 3 or β-actin, 2 from Western blots of nuclear and cytoplasmic cell extracts of RasB1 cells following EGF 3 treatment. (D) The intensity of p-ERK1/2 was normalized to total ERK1/2 from Western 4 blots of nuclear and cytoplasmic cell extracts of RasB1 cells following EGF treatment. (E) 5 ChIP analyses of predicted ATRSs in the pri-miR-1-1 promoter region of 22Rv1 cells 6 following EGF treatment. Enrichment of each protein at each site is given as a percentage of 7 the total input and then normalized to each IgG. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM, n=3. 8 * vs. -EGF. ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001. 9 10 Figure S4. EGFR signaling activation is correlated with induced TWIST1 and prostate 11 cancer progression. (A) Mean TWIST1 levels in human normal (n=28), primary (n=98), and 12 metastatic (n=13) prostate samples collected and analyzed at MSKCC. * vs. normal tissue; # 13 vs. primary cancer tissues. * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001. (B and C) GSEA analyses 14 showing enrichment of the MSKCC (B) and TCGA (C) prostate cancer datasets with EGFR 15 signaling downregulation-responsive genes in cancer patients expressing low levels of 16 TWIST1. NES, normalized enrichment score; FDR, false discovery rate. (D and E) 17 EGF-upregulated signature genes expressed as a summed z-score for samples separated on 18 the basis of TWIST1 (D) and miR-1 (E) expressions above median (TWIST1 High and 19 miR-1 Low) or below median (TWIST1 Low and miR-1 High) in the MSKCC dataset. (F) 20 Immunoblotting of cell extracts from RasB1 and PC3 cells following EGF treatment. (G) 21 Morphology of RasB1 and PC3 cells following EGF treatment. 22 23 Figure S5. Induction of TWIST1 is correlated with lower miR-1 and with aggressive clinical 24 outcomes. (A and B) TWIST1 (A) and miR-1 (B) expressions in patient samples at different 25 clinical stages in the prostate cancer samples collected and analyzed at MSKCC. * vs. T2A. 26 * p<0.05, ** p<0.01. (C and D) Kaplan-Meier curve showing the survival rate relative to 7 1 TWIST1 (C) and miR-1 (D) expressions in prostate cancer samples collected and analyzed 2 at MSKCC. Patient groups with high TWIST1 and low miR-1 levels (blue line) had a lower 3 survival rate compared to groups with low TWIST1 and high miR-1 levels (black line). 4 Hazard ratios (log rank) were 1.664 (TWIST1) and 1.907 (miR-1). X-axes show the time in 5 months, and Y-axes show percentage survival (log rank (Mantel-Cox) test p=0.0026 6 (TWIST1) and p=0.0017 (miR-1)). (E) H&E and IHC staining of bone metastases with an 7 antibody specific for TWIST1 in mouse from tumor-bearing mice inoculated with parental 8 RasB1 9 (miR-1/EGFR) cells. B: bone; T: tumor; BM: bone marrow. Scale bars represent 50 µm. (control), RasB1/miR-1 (miR-1/EV), and EGFR-rescued RasB1/miR-1 10 11 Supplemental References 12 13 1. 14 15 Taylor BS, Schultz N, Hieronymus H, Gopalan A, Xiao Y, Carver BS, et al. Integrative genomic profiling of human prostate cancer. Cancer Cell 2010;18(1):11-22. 2. Subramanian A, Tamayo P, Mootha VK, Mukherjee S, Ebert BL, Gillette MA, et al. 16 Gene set enrichment analysis: a knowledge-based approach for interpreting 17 genome-wide expression profiles. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2005;102(43):15545-50. 18 3. 19 20 genes by microarray. Arch Biochem Biophys 2002;399(2):212-24. 4. 21 22 Ma Y, Croxton R, Moorer RL, Jr., Cress WD. Identification of novel E2F1-regulated Amit I, Citri A, Shay T, Lu Y, Katz M, Zhang F, et al. A module of negative feedback regulators defines growth factor signaling. Nat Genet 2007;39(4):503-12. 5. Liu YN, Yin JJ, Abou-Kheir W, Hynes PG, Casey OM, Fang L, et al. MiR-1 and 23 miR-200 inhibit EMT via Slug-dependent and tumorigenesis via Slug-independent 24 mechanisms. Oncogene 2013;32(3):296-306. 25 26 8 1 Supplemental Tables 2 Table S1. Positions of AT-rich minimal consensus sequences (ATRSs) 3 Site Position ATRS1 20: 61149019 ATRS2 20: 61150113 ATRS3 20: 61150287 ATRS4 20: 61151201 ATRS5 18: 19416238 ATRS6 18: 19417140 ATRS7 18: 19417749 ATRS8 18: 19418271 Table S2. Primer sequences of the 3'UTR and promoter reporter constructs Primary hsa-mir-1-1 promoter ATRS-binding elements reporter construct hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS P1 TGAAAACTTATCGGCAGTGG hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS P2 TCCCAACAGAGGGAAGTCAC hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS P3 GAGGCAGCAGAGACCGTGAAAACTTATCGGCAGTGG hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS P4 CGAACAGAGAGAGACCGTCCCAACAGAGGGAAGTCAC hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS1M F GCGGCTGGGTGCTCTAGATCTATGCAGACG hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS1M R CCAGACGAACCTCCGCCGACCCACG hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS2M F AGTTTACTTAAACCCTCTAGAACAGGCTCAT hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS2M R CGGTGAGCGATTCAAATGAATTTGG hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS4M F GACAGGCGCTCGAGGAATTCTGGGGCTCACT hsa-mir-1-1 ATRS4M R GACCCCGGTCCCTGTCCGCGAGCTCCT Primary hsa-mir-1-2 promoter ATRSs binding elements reporter construct hsa-mir-1-2 ATRS P1 TGAAAAGTTAATACCACAACCACAA hsa-mir-1-2 ATRS P2 CGCAGGAGTGCCTACTCAG hsa-mir-1-2 ATRS P3 GAGGCAGCAGAGACCGTGAAAAGTTAATACCACAACCACAA hsa-mir-1-2 ATRS P4 CGAACAGAGAGAGACCGCGCAGGAGTGCCTACTCAG Human TWIST1 3'UTR reporter constructs primer sequence 4 hTWIST1 3UTR F atcgctcgagGGGCCGGAGACCTAGATGT hTWIST1 3UTR R attcgtttaaacTGAATGCATTTAGACACCGGA hTWIST1 3’UTR M555 F AAACTTAAAATACAAAAAACAAAAGGATATTTATTTATT hTWIST1 3’UTR M555 R TTTGTTTTTTTTTGAATTTTATGTTTTTTGT 9 1 2 3 Table S3. Primer sequences for the qRT-PCR Gene 5'-3' TWIST1 F CGGACAAGCTGAGCAAGAT TWIST1 R CTGGAGGACCTGGTAGAGGA EGFR F CATGTCGATGGACTTCCAGA EGFR R GGACAGCTTGGATCACACTTT GAPDH F CCAGTAGAGGCAGGGATGAT GAPDH R CTTTCATTGTCTTTTCCGCC Table S4. Antibody information for Western blotting Primary antibody Source Dilution Secondary antibody Source Dilution p-EGFR (Y1068) Cell Signaling (#3777) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/5000 EGFR Cell Signaling (#4267) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/5000 TWIST1 GeneTex (GTX127310) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/5000 p-ERK1/2 Cell Signaling (#4376) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/5000 ERK1/2 Cell Signaling (#9102) 1/1000 anti-mouse IgG Jackson Lab 1/20000 Vimentin Santa Cruz (sc-7557) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/5000 Histone 3 Millipore (#07-690) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/20000 GAPDH Novus (NB300-221) 1/1000 anti-mouse IgG Jackson Lab 1/5000 β-actin GeneTex (GTX109639) 1/1000 anti-rabbit IgG Jackson Lab 1/20000 Table S5. Antibody information and primer sequences of the ChIP assay ChIP antibodies Primary antibody Source Dilution p-EGFR (Y1068) Cell Signaling (#3777) 1/50 EGFR Cell Signaling (#4267) 1/50 GAPDH Novus (NB300-221) 1/50 Rabbit IgG Santa Cruz (sc-2027) 1/50 Mouse IgG Santa Cruz (sc-2343) 1/50 ChIP primers Site 5'-3' ATRS1 F GGTATTCACCGCTGAAGAGC ATRS1 R AAAGGGCAGGAGAGTCACCC 10 1 ATRS2 F AGCCTTCTTTCCACCTCTCAC ATRS2 R AAAATGTGGAGAAAGAGCCAGA ATRS3 F CTGCTTCCCACTCAGAGACA ATRS3 R CCAGCCCCTGATCAATACCA ATRS4 F AGGGGGACAGGAAAGTGTTG ATRS4 R CTGTCTCACACACTCACACGA ATRS5 F GCAGCAGAGGGACTTCACTT ATRS5 R AGCACTGCCAAATAAAGCGG ATRS6 F TCCCCTCTTCTGAAGCATTTCA ATRS6 R TTCCCTCTCCTCCCCTCTTC ATRS7 F TGATTTTGCATCTCTAGTAAGTCACA ATRS7 R AGCAGTTTCAGCAATGCAGC ATRS8 F ACCCAGGTGCTCACAGACTA ATRS8 R TGCACTTTGATGCTTCTCTTTGG