- Prensner, John R;
- Iyer, Matthew K;
- Sahu, Anirban;
- Asangani, Irfan A;
- Cao, Qi;
- Patel, Lalit;
- Vergara, Ismael A;
- Davicioni, Elai;
- Erho, Nicholas;
- Ghadessi, Mercedeh;
- Jenkins, Robert B;
- Triche, Timothy J;
- Malik, Rohit;
- Bedenis, Rachel;
- McGregor, Natalie;
- Ma, Teng;
- Chen, Wei;
- Han, Sumin;
- Jing, Xiaojun;
- Cao, Xuhong;
- Wang, Xiaoju;
- Chandler, Benjamin;
- Yan, Wei;
- Siddiqui, Javed;
- Kunju, Lakshmi P;
- Dhanasekaran, Saravana M;
- Pienta, Kenneth J;
- Feng, Felix Y;
- Chinnaiyan, Arul M
Prostate cancers remain indolent in the majority of individuals but behave aggressively in a minority. The molecular basis for this clinical heterogeneity remains incompletely understood. Here we characterize a long noncoding RNA termed SChLAP1 (second chromosome locus associated with prostate-1; also called LINC00913) that is overexpressed in a subset of prostate cancers. SChLAP1 levels independently predict poor outcomes, including metastasis and prostate cancer-specific mortality. In vitro and in vivo gain-of-function and loss-of-function experiments indicate that SChLAP1 is critical for cancer cell invasiveness and metastasis. Mechanistically, SChLAP1 antagonizes the genome-wide localization and regulatory functions of the SWI/SNF chromatin-modifying complex. These results suggest that SChLAP1 contributes to the development of lethal cancer at least in part by antagonizing the tumor-suppressive functions of the SWI/SNF complex.