1. Introduction
HNSCC (head and neck squamous cell carcinoma) arises from the epithelial membranes of the oral cavity, hypopharynx, oropharynx, nasopharynx, or larynx [1]. Currently, HNSCC is the eighth most common malignant cancer worldwide and its comprehensive treatment includes surgery, chemotherapy, and/or radiotherapy based on the tumor localization and clinical stage. Although the therapy has been refined in recent decades, the 5-year overall survival rate remains unchanged at a level of approximately 50% [2]. Furthermore, the treatment response and clinical outcome of HNSCC patients can be different even in the same tumor localization and staging. This observation is an effect of the diverse genetic and epigenetic landscape of individual tumors, which leads to an imbalance of cellular pathways and disorders in the signaling cascade and immune system [3,4,5]. Thus, the description of molecular mechanisms and identification of prognostic biomarkers for HNSCC is crucial to develop novel targeted therapeutic strategies.
RNA methylation at the nitrogen sixth of adenosine (m6A, N6-methyladenosine) is the most abundant, internal RNA modification, found within the 5′-RRACH-3′ (R, purine; A* methylable A; C, cytosine; H, non-guanine base) motif, identified on almost every type of RNA [6]. Although the m6A is commonly enriched in the coding sequences and near translation stop codons in 3′UTR, its distribution may vary depending on the individual RNA and tissue type [7]. M6A modification is regulated by the dynamic interaction of RNA methylation writers (methyltransferases), erasers (demethylases), and readers (binding proteins) [8]. The METTL3 (Methyltransferase like 3) is the main catalytic core of the methyltransferase complex and works together with METTL14 (Methyltransferase like 14), WTAP (WT1 associated protein), RBM15 (RNA-binding motif protein 15), and VIRMA (Vir like m6A methyltransferase associated) to install m6A onto RNA. The demethylation is processed by FTO (fat mass and obesity-associated protein) and ALKBH5 (AlkB homolog 5), whereas direct m6A readers belong to the YTH domain-containing family, including YTHDF1, YTHDF2, and YTHDF3 (N6-metyladenosine RNA binding protein 1,2,3) and YTHDC1 and YTHDC2 (YTH domain containing 1, 2), which binds m6A depending on its location on the RNA. The m6A modification is involved in nearly all crucial RNA metabolic aspects, including pre-mRNA processing, mRNA splicing, translation, nuclear export, decay, and the promotion of miRNA biogenesis [9,10]. Hence, multiple studies indicate its regulatory role in many biological processes in both physiological and pathological conditions, such as cancers. RNA methylation disturbances may promote the proliferation, invasion, and migration of tumor cells and modulate the treatment response [11,12,13].
To date, only a few studies indicated the essential regulatory role of m6A post-transcriptional modification and RNA methylation-related genes in head and neck cancers [14,15,16,17,18]. In brief, our study quantifies the global m6A level in HNSCC cell lines and cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues and correlates its content with expression of selected RNA methylation methyltransferase (METTL3), demethylase (FTO), and m6A binding proteins (YTHDF2, YTHDC2).
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Patient Material
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma tissues and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues were collected from 45 patients who underwent tumor surgical resection in the Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, The Greater Poland Cancer Centre. Samples were immediately frozen and stored at −80 °C until RNA isolation. The criteria that excluded patients from this study involved second distant metastasis and an HPV-positive test result. The characterization of the total study cohort is presented in Table 1. The procedures were approved by the Local Ethical Committee of Poznań University of Medical Sciences.
2.2. Cell Culture
The FaDu, Detroit 562, A-253, and SCC-15 cell lines were obtained from the Head and Neck Cancer Panel of the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC®TCP-1012™) and correspond with different tumor locations: hypopharynx, pharynx, salivary gland, and tongue, respectively. The FaDu cells were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s Medium (DMEM) (Biowest, Nuaillé, France), the Detroit 562 in Eagle’s Minimum Essential Medium (EMEM) (Biowest, Nuaillé, France), and the A-253 cells in McCoy’s 5a Medium Modified (Biowest, Nuaillé, France). The SCC-15 cells were cultured in a 1:1 mixture of DMEM and Ham’s F12 Medium (Biowest, Nuaillé, France) containing 1.2 g/L sodium bicarbonata, 2.5 Mm L-glutamine, 15 mM HEPES, and 0.5 mM sodium pyruvate supplemented with 400 ng/mL hydrocortisone. All growth media were supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (Biowest, Nuaillé, France) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Biochrom, Holliston, MA, USA). The cell lines were cultured in an incubator at 37 °C, 5% CO2 atmosphere, and a humidity level of 100%. These cells were used for total RNA isolation.
2.3. RNA Digestion and LC-ESI-MS/MS Analysis
In total, 500 ng of RNA samples was denatured for 15 min at 95 °C and fully digested by S1 nuclease (180U, Promega, Madison, WI, USA) for 4 h at 37 °C. After the addition of alkaline phosphatase (CIAP, 30U, Promega, Madison, WI, USA) and Venom phosphodiesterase I type IV (0.01U, Sigma-Aldrich, Saint Louis, MO, USA), the samples were incubated for another 1 h at 37 °C. The digested RNA samples were diluted in 100 µL Mili-Q water (final volume 200 µL) and extracted twice by equal volume of chloroform. Afterward, the resulting aqueous layers were collected, lyophilized to dryness, and redissolved in 100 µL Mili-Q water. LC-ESI-MS/MS (liquid chromatography electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometric) analysis of nucleosides was performed on a Shimadzu LCMS8060 mass spectrometer (Shimadzu, Japan) connected to a Nexera Mikros HPLC system (Shimadzu, Japan). Separation was carried out on a Waters NanoACQUITY Symmetry C18 column, 150 × 0.3 mm, 3.5 µm particle size. As mobile phases, formic acid in water (0.1%, v/v) and formic acid in methanol (0.1%, v/v) were used (phases A and B, respectively). Elution started with 5% solvent B for 5 min, then was raised to 30% solvent B in 10 min and to 50% solvent B in 5 min; after 3 min, the equilibration solvent ratio was set back to 5% solvent B for another 10 min. The flow rate was 5 µL/min, and the column temperature was 30 °C. The MS detection was performed under positive electrospray ionization mode, and the source parameters were as follows: probe voltage 2.6 kV, desolvation line temperature 250 °C, heater block 400 °C, nebulizing gas 1L/min. The triplequad analyzer was operated in MRM mode, and the specific reaction for m6A fragmentation was monitored (282.1→150.1), as well as for A (268.1→136.1), which was used for reference. All mass chromatograms were analyzed employing Shimadzu Lab Solutions software. Quantitation was based on calibration curves, which were constructed by plotting the mean peak area ratio of m6A/A versus the mean molar ratio of m6A/A (ranging from 0.05 to 5% of m6A/A) (Figure S1).
2.4. RNA Isolation, Reverse Transcription, and Real-Time Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (RQ-PCR) Analysis
The RNA purification kit (RNeasy Mini Kit, Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) was used to extract total RNA from tissue specimens. The cDNA was synthesized with RevertAid First Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit (ThermoFisher, Waltham, MA, USA) using 500 ng of total RNA, oligo dT primers, and random hexamer primers. The real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction for individual genes expression analysis was conducted with a PowerTrack SYBR Green Master Mix (ThermoFisher, Waltham, MA, USA) using the CFX96 Real-Time System (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA). The reaction conditions for all amplicons were as follows: initially 95 °C for 15 min, followed by 40 cycles at 95 °C for 10 s, 60–62 °C (depending on the primers used) for 10 s, and 72 °C for 10 s. The gene expression was normalized to the GAPDH housekeeping gene, and relative expression levels were determined by the Pfaffl method. The primers sequence used in this study are listed in Table S1.
2.5. Statistical Analysis
The normality of the observed patient data distribution was assessed using the Shapiro–Wilk test. The median values were compered using the U Mann–Whitney test, and the mean values were compered using an unpaired t-test with Welch’s correction. The correlation between the studied variables was determined using the Spearman correlation. The patient’s survival analyses were estimated by the Kaplan–Meier method. Statistical analysis was performed with the GraphPad Prism 9.0.1 software, and p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
3. Results
3.1. Investigation of m6A Modification Level in HNSCC Patients and Cell Lines
We determined the percentage ratio of m6A to A in total RNA samples from 45 HNSCC tissues, from 45 adjacent histopathologically unchanged tissues, and in 4 cell lines (FaDu, Detroit 562, A-253, SCC-15 with different tumor locations: hypopharynx, pharynx, salivary gland, and tongue accordingly) using the LC-ESI-MS/MS method. We have observed no significant differences in m6A level comparing both types of tissues in the examined HNSCC patients’ group (median value is 0.1037 for histopathologically unchanged tissues and 0.1119 for cancerous tissues, respectively) (Figure 1A). We have also characterized the m6A level in the HNSCC cell lines with mean values equaling: FaDu 0.099, Detroit 562 0.098, A-253 0.087, and SCC-15 0.110 (Figure 1B), with an overall mean value μ = 0.098, SD = 0.008.
Furthermore, we have evaluated the association between m6A level and patients’ clinical features, and we have observed no significant differences in m6A level between cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues from all examined HNSCC patients according to patient age at time of surgery, gender, primary tumor size, histological grade, advancement of lymph node metastases, and anatomical site (Table S2).
3.2. mRNA Levels of METTL3 and FTO Genes in HNSCC Patient Samples and Cell Lines
We have used qPCR to determine the METTL3 (methyltransferase) and FTO (demethylase) transcript levels in cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues from 45 patients with HNSCC and in 4 cell lines (FaDu, Detroit 562, A-253, SCC-15). We have found no significant differences in METTL3 (p = 0.6494) and FTO (p = 0.3611) mRNA levels between those groups (Figure 2A,B) and no correlation with clinical features (Tables S3 and S4). Moreover, we have performed the Kaplan–Meier survival analysis among HNSCC patients according to the increased/decreased mRNA level of METTL3 and FTO genes in cancerous tissues compared to paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues, and we have not observed a statistically significant difference in the probability of survival for any of the analyzed genes (Figure S2).The FaDu cell line, with a 0.62 value of METTL3 relative expression, statistically differs from A-253 with a 1.25 METTL3 expression value (p = 0.02) and SCC-15 with a 1.21 METTL3 expression value (p = 0.036) (Figure 2C). In the case of the FTO transcript level, the Detroit 562 cell line has a statistically significant higher relative expression value (1.92) than FaDu (1.17) (p = 0.033) (Figure 2D). Additionally, we have observed a statistically significant correlation between m6A level and METTL3 and FTO transcript levels in cancerous tissue (p = 0.0097, r = 0.3856; p = 0.0484, r = 0.3028, respectively) (Figure 3A,B) and no correlation in histopathologically unchanged tissue (Figure 3C,D).
3.3. mRNA Levels of m6A Readers YTHDF2 and YTHDC2 Genes in HNSCC Patient Samples and Cell Lines
We have used qPCR to compare YTHDF2 and YTHDC2 (m6A readers) transcript levels in cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues from 45 patients with HNSCC and in 4 cell lines (FaDu, Detroit 562, A-253, SCC-15). We found no significant differences in mRNA levels between cancerous and histopathologically unchanged tissues (Figure 4A,B) and no correlation with clinical features (Tables S5 and S6). Moreover, we have performed the Kaplan–Meier survival analysis among the HNSCC patients according to the increased/decreased mRNA level of YTHDF2 and YTHDC2 genes in cancerous tissues compared to paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues, and we have not observed any statistically significant difference in the probability of survival for any of the analyzed genes (Figure S3). The YTHDF2 transcript level does not significantly differ in all studied cell lines in which FaDu corresponds to the lowest value of the YTHDF2 relative expression (1.01) and SCC-15 to the highest (1.61) (Figure 4C). In the case of the YTHDC2 transcript level, the Detroit 562 cell line has a statistically significant lower relative expression value (0.79) than A-253 (1.70) (p = 0.001) and SCC-15 (1.51) (p = 0.029) (Figure 4D). Moreover, we have observed a statistically significant correlation between m6A level and YTHDF2 and YTHDC2 transcript levels in cancerous tissue (p = 0.0003, r = 0.5170; p = 0.0438, r = 3053, respectively) (Figure 5A,B) and no correlation in histopathologically unchanged tissue (Figure 5C,D).
4. Discussion
Accumulating data indicates the significant role of m6A RNA modification in the post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression that determines the proper function of crucial physiological processes. Therefore, disturbances in m6A RNA methylation may lead to the development of pathological changes, including cancers [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]. HNSCC initiation, progression, and growth are complex molecular processes encompassing genetic and epigenetic alterations. Unfortunately, the potential association between m6A RNA methylation and HNSCC development is poorly described. Thus, the primary goal of this study was to quantify the m6A modification in total RNA and the expression of m6A RNA methylation-related genes in HNSCC patients and cell lines. Analyzing the study cohort of 45 HNSCC patients with differential clinical features, we have not observed differences in the amount of m6A RNA modification nor a correlation with clinical features. However, to the best of our knowledge, we have determined for the first time the m6A modification level in four HNSCC cell lines. To date, a similar m6A quantification method was used in ovarian cancer studies that also showed no differences between ovarian cancer and normal tissues but indicated a correlation between its elevated content with patients’ overall survival [21]. In the case of pancreatic cancer, the higher level of m6A modification measured using HPLC/MS was also correlated with patients’ overall survival and with more lymphatic metastases [22]. Among head and neck cancers, the higher level of m6A RNA modification in tumor tissues was found in 34 laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC) and paired-matched adjacent normal tissues [14]. However, the measurements were done with a colorimetric method that is less sensitive than LC-ESI-MS/MS. Other studies analyzed the occurrence of m6A in specific mRNAs in conjunction with functional consequences on a cellular level [23,24]. Hence, the lack of differences in global m6A level between cancerous and histopathologically unchanged tissues in our study cohort does not exclude the role of m6A in HNSCC, but rather suggests that m6A disturbances in specific mRNA sites may possibly affect HNSCC development. Moreover, we have measured the global m6A level that includes a location on almost every type of RNA. As a result, the final picture is more complex, as disturbances of m6A quantity may differ depending on their specific location, as opposed to being solely mRNA related. Notably, with regard to the crucial role of m6A modification in shaping and controlling the tumor microenvironment (TME), its distribution in the tumor may vary in terms of hypoxia, metabolic dysregulation, immune escape, and chronic inflammation and, as a result, also be strongly dependent on cellular conditions [13].
The m6A RNA methylation process is regulated by the interaction between components of the methylation complex (METTL3, METTL14, WTAP, RBM15, and VIRMA protein), demethylases (FTO, ALKBH5) that remove methyl groups, and enzymes that bind to m6A modification (YTHDF1, YTHDF2, YTHDF3, YTHDC1, and YTHDC2). Thus, we have also measured the mRNA level of selected RNA methylation-related genes (METTL3, FTO, YTHDF2, and YTHDC2), which were noticed to significantly affect the tumorigenesis process, and we have determined their correlation with m6A status and HNSCC patients’ clinical features and overall survival. Zhao and Cui indicated the differentially expressed m6A RNA methylation regulators in HNSCC, based on the TCGA database, and validated these results in 236 HNSCC patients. They have found increased transcript levels of METTL3, YTHDF1, VIRMA, ALKBH5, YTHDF2, METTL14, WTAP, and RBM15 genes and a decreased level of the YTHDC2 gene [15].
Previous studies have shown that the catalytic core enzyme METTL3 plays critical roles in a variety types of cancer as an oncogene and a tumor suppressor. For instance, the overexpression of METTL3 and METTL14 correlates with advanced T stage and poor patient prognosis in HNSCC tissue samples [17]. The METTL3 gene was also found to be upregulated in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) patients from TCGA database analysis and independent cancerous clinical samples [18]. Following this, in vitro and in vivo studies have shown that METTL3 knockdown reduces OSCC cell proliferation, self-renewal, migration, and invasion [18]. Subsequently, m6A RNA methylation erasers, FTO and ALKBH5, were identified to be dysregulated in HNSCC and other cancers [25,26,27,28]. In our study cohort, we have not observed the higher transcript level of the METTL3 and FTO genes in both examined tissue types. However, we have found a positive correlation between their expression and the total m6A abundance in cancerous tissues. Additionally, we have not noticed that lower m6A modification content is correlated with a decreased mRNA level of the FTO gene, but conversely, the more m6A modifications, the higher FTO expression. These findings correspond with other researchers’ group results [28,29]. This could be explained by the FTO preference to demethylate 2-O-dimethyladenosine (m6Am) and N1-methyladenosine (m1A) rather than m6A. The last group of analyzed genes (YTHDF2, YTHDC2) belongs to the m6A RNA methylation readers family. YTHDF2 binding to m6A promotes RNA decay, while YTHDC2 is involved in mRNA degradation and translation initiation. These regulators were demonstrated to play a crucial role in a variety types of cancers [21,30,31,32]. The role of the YTHDF2 gene in HNSCC has not been explored so far, whereas YTHDC2 was found to be a tumor suppressor with low expression in HNSCC samples, while its upregulation was associated with longer-term survival and the recurrence-free survival of HNSCC patients [33]. In our study, we have observed a statistically significant positive correlation between mRNA levels of YTHDF2 and YTHDC2 genes and the relative m6A modification amount in cancerous tissues. Even though we have not observed the overall differences in the mRNA expression level of selected genes between cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues in our patients’ cohort, the correlation of selected genes’ expression with the total m6A abundance may suggest the relevance of m6A RNA methylation machinery in HNSCC. Moreover, we have also indicated the differences in METTL3, FTO, and YTHDC2 mRNA levels in HNSCC cell lines. The METTL3 transcript amount significantly differs between the FaDu cell line (hypopharynx localization) and the A-253 (salivary glands) as well as SCC-15 (tongue). Moreover, in OSCC tissues, the METTL3 gene was found to be upregulated [18] similar to the OSCC in vitro model SCC-15 in our results. Subsequently, the FaDu cell line exhibits a significantly lower FTO mRNA level compared with Detroit-562 (pharynx localization). Finally, Detroit-562 corresponds with the lowest expression of the m6A reader protein YTHDC2.
The limitation of our study is a quite small study group and a lack of description of the molecular mechanisms and consequences for tumorigenesis in HNSCC in vitro or in vivo models. Moreover, a more detailed study is needed to quantify the m6A abundance not only in total RNA but also in mRNA specifically. However, our future studies aim for the high-throughput identification of m6A modification sites (MeRIP-seq) and the same identification the genes of its significantly higher abundance and for the performance of in vitro studies to estimate its functional effect on HNSCC cells. Such an examination is required to better understand the RNA methylation impact on HNSCC tumorigenesis. Furthermore, due to patients’ material limitations, we have not determined the protein level of the selected RNA methylation-related components.
5. Conclusions
Our study indicates the positive correlation of total RNA m6A modification abundance with selected methyltransferase, demethylase, and binding proteins. Moreover, the lack of global m6A differences between cancerous and histopathologically unchanged tissues suggests that the final picture could be blurred by our approach, in which we have measured the m6A level in total RNA, whereas alterations of m6A at individual mRNA possibly influence HNSCC tumorigenesis. Additionally, the differences in mRNA levels of METTL3, FTO, and YTHDC2 in the studied cell lines indicate that its expression may vary depending on the tumor localization. Future perspectives encompass the identification of m6A sites by high-throughput analysis (MeRIP-seq) and the estimation of the functional effects of HNSCC cells.
Supplementary Materials
The following are available online at
Author Contributions
K.R. contributed to designing this study; acquisition, analysis, and interpretation of data12; and writing the manuscript. A.A.R.-W. participated in experimental programming of the study and writing the manuscript. Ł.M. performed LC-ESI-MS/MS analysis. A.K. collected the clinical data. W.M.S. and W.G. were involved in the intellectual and experimental programming of the study. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This research was funded by Polish National Science Centre, grant number 2020/37/N/NZ5/02872 and The Greater Poland Cancer Centre grant number 31/08/2020/PRB/WCO/008 to K.R.
Institutional Review Board Statement
The study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki, and approved by the Local Ethical Committee of Poznań University of Medical Sciences (protocol code 452/20, date of approval 17.06.2020).
Informed Consent Statement
Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.
Data Availability Statement
Data supporting reported results are available from the first author to all interested researchers.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Abbreviations
ALKBH5 | AlkB homolog 5 |
FTO | Fat mass and obesity associated protein |
HNSCC | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma |
LC-ESI-MS/MS | Liquid chromatography electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometric |
LSCC | Laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma |
m1A | N1-methyladenosine |
m6A | N6-methyladenosine |
m6Am | 2-O-dimethyladenosine |
METTL3, 14 | Methyltransferase like 3, 14 |
OSCC | Oral squamous cell carcinoma |
qPCR | Quantitavie polymerase chain reaction |
RBM15 | RNA-binding motif protein 15 |
TCGA | The Cancer Genome Atlas |
TME | Tumor microenvironment |
WTAP | WT1 associated protein |
VIRMA | Vir-like m6A methyltransferase associated |
YTHDC1, 2 | YTH domain containing 1, 2 |
YTHDF1, 2, 3 | N6-metyladenosine RNA binding protein 1, 2, 3 |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Figures and Table
Figure 1. The percentage of m6A RNA modification in relation to adenosine (A) in total RNA derived from 45 head and neck squamous cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues (A) and 4 cell lines (FaDu, Detroit 562, A-253, SCC-15) (B). ns (non-significant), + (mean value).
Figure 2. The transcript level of (A) METTL3 and (B) FTO genes in cancerous and histopathologically unchanged tissues from HNSCC patients and (C,D) cell lines. ns (non-significant), + (mean value), * (p ≤ 0.05).
Figure 3. Spearman correlation of m6A/A [%] and METTL3 and FTO mRNA level in cancerous tissues (A,B) and histopathologically unchanged tissues (C,D).
Figure 4. The transcript level of (A) YTHDF2 and (B) YTHDC2 genes in cancerous and histopathologically unchanged tissues from patients with HNSCC and cell lines (C,D). ns (non-significant), + (mean value), * (p ≤ 0.05), ** (p < 0.01).
Figure 5. Spearman correlation of m6A/A [%] and YTHDF2 and YTHDC2 mRNA level in cancerous tissues (A,B) and histopathologically unchanged tissues (C,D).
Characteristics of the study cohort.
Characteristic | Total Number (n/%) |
---|---|
Total study cohort | 90 |
Histopathologically unchanged tissues | 45 |
Cancerous tissues | 45 |
Age at the time of surgery (years) | |
Mean | 60 |
Median | 61.5 |
Range | 26–91 |
Gender [n/(%)] | |
Male | 30 (66.77) |
Female | 15 (33.33) |
Tumor stage (TNM classification) [n/(%)] | |
T1 | 3 (6.67) |
T2 | 14 (31.11) |
T3 | 10 (22.22) |
T4 | 16 (35.56) |
N0 | 16 (35.55) |
N1 | 8 (17.78) |
N2 | 13 (28.89) |
N3 | 3 (6.67) |
Histologic grade [n/(%)] | |
G1 | 6 (13.33) |
G2 | 33 (73.33) |
G3 | 6 (13.33) |
Anatomical site [n/(%)] | |
Larynx | 17 (37.78) |
Oral cavity | 25 (55.55) |
Oropharynx | 3 (6.67) |
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Abstract
RNA methylation at the nitrogen sixth of adenosine (m6A, N6-methyladenosine) is the most abundant RNA modification which plays a crucial role in all RNA metabolic aspects. Recently, m6A modification has been assigned to mediate the biological processes of cancer cells, but their significance in HNSCC development is still poorly described. Thus, the main aim of this study was to globally quantify m6A modification by the mass spectrometry approach and determine the mRNA expression level of selected m6A RNA methyltransferase (METTL3), demethylase (FTO), and m6A readers (YTHDF2, YTHDC2) in 45 HNSCC patients and 4 cell lines (FaDu, Detroit 562, A-253 and SCC-15) using qPCR. In the results, we have not observed differences in the global amount of m6A modification and the mRNA level of the selected genes between the cancerous and paired-matched histopathologically unchanged tissues from 45 HNSCC patients. However, we have found a positive correlation between selected RNA methylation machinery genes expression and m6A abundance on total RNA and characterized the transcript level of those genes in the HNSCC cell lines. Moreover, the lack of global m6A differences between cancerous and histopathologically unchanged tissues suggests that m6A alterations in specific RNA sites may specifically influence HNSCC tumorigenesis.
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1 The Greater Poland Cancer Centre, Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, 61-866 Poznan, Poland;
2 Department of Histology and Embryology, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, 60-781 Poznan, Poland;
3 European Center for Bioinformatics and Genomics Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, 61-704 Poznan, Poland;
4 The Greater Poland Cancer Centre, Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, 61-866 Poznan, Poland;
5 Radiobiology Laboratory, The Greater Poland Cancer Centre, Department of Medical Physics, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, 61-866 Poznan, Poland;