The abundant and reversible N6‐methyladenosine (m6A) R
NA
modification and its modulators have important roles in regulating various gene expression and biological processes. Here, we demonstrate that fat mass and obesity associated (
FTO
), as an m6A demethylase, plays a critical anti‐tumorigenic role in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (cc
RCC
).
FTO
is suppressed in cc
RCC
tissue. The low expression of
FTO
in human cc
RCC
correlates with increased tumour severity and poor patient survival. The Von Hippel‐Lindau‐deficient cells expressing
FTO
restores mitochondrial activity, induces oxidative stress and
ROS
production and shows impaired tumour growth, through increasing expression of
PGC
‐1α by reducing m6A levels in its
mRNA
transcripts. Our work demonstrates the functional importance of the m6A methylation and its modulator, and uncovers a critical
FTO
‐
PGC
‐1α axis for developing effective therapeutic strategies in the treatment of cc
RCC
.
Various studies demonstrate that long noncoding RNAs (IncRNAs) act as oncogenes or tumor suppressors in cancer. However, the function of IncRNAs in bladder cancer still remains largely unknown. In this study, we identified an IncRNA, gastric cancer–associated IncRNA1 (GClnc1), which was in high abundance in bladder cancer tissues and its expression was related to poor survival rates in patients with bladder cancer. In vitro and in vivo assays showed that GClnc1 significantly promoted cell proliferation, metastasis, and invasiveness in bladder cancer. Mechanistically, we first found that GClnc1 bound to LIN28B and promoted the expression of myelocytomatosis proto‐oncogene (MYC) through the LIN28B/let‐7a/MYC pathway. In short, GClnc1 is clinically, functionally, and mechanistically oncogenic in bladder cancer. GClnc1 may be a potential target for treating patients with bladder cancer.—Zhuang, C., Ma, Q., Zhuang, C., Ye, J., Zhang, F., Gui, Y. LncRNA GClnc1 promotes proliferation and invasion of bladder cancer through activation of MYC. FASEB J. 33, 11045–11059 (2019). http://www.fasebj.org
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