Speaker Biography

William Beck

University of Illinois, USA

Title: Splicing factors as novel therapeutic targets in cancer

William Beck
Biography:

William T. Beck, PhD, is University Distinguished Professor and former Head of the Department of Biopharmaceutical Sciences in the College of Pharmacy at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His research efforts have focused on understanding the molecular and genetic mechanisms of anticancer drug action and tumor cell resistance to anticancer drugs. His current research focuses on splicing factor genes and their involvement in cancer initiation, progression, and resistance to therapy, as well as their potential as novel therapeutic targets in ovarian, breast, and brain cancers.

Abstract:

Pre-mRNA splicing, mediated by splicing factors, is a normal biochemical phenomenon that accounts in large part for the
proteomic diversity in our cells, as there are ~25,000 genes but ~100,000 proteins. Splice isoforms are specific for: Tissue, disease,
population, individuals, and are related to drug response. Cancer-specific alternative splicing as well as aberrant expression
of splicing factors is seen in tumors compared to normal tissues, but the mechanistic basis for this differential expression
remains unclear. We found that increased splicing in ovarian and breast cancer cells is related to increased expression of
some splicing factors, including the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein, polypyrimidine tract binding protein 1 (PTBP1)
and the serine-arginine rich protein, SRp20/SRSF3. Inhibition of expression of PTBP1 inhibits in vitro tumor cell growth,
colony formation, invasiveness (metastatic behavior), aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect) and tumor growth in vivo; alters
expression of >1500 genes in many metabolic pathways and sensitizes cells to drugs. SRSF3 is up-regulated in breast tumor
tissues compared to normal breast tissue and correlated with tumor grade. In addition, knockdown of SRp20 resulted in cell
growth inhibition and apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner and was partially reversed by pretreating the cells with the pancaspase
inhibitor z-VAD-fmk, suggesting partial involvement of caspases in this apoptosis. Finally, we have identified by highthroughput
screening an FDA approved small molecule inhibitor of PTBP1 that inhibits cancer cell growth. Future studies will
be discussed.