Diagenode

Methyltransferase Inhibition Enables Tgf Driven Induction of and in Cancer Cells.


Liu Y-T et al.

deletion or silencing is common across human cancer, reinforcing the general importance of bypassing its tumor suppression in cancer formation or progression. In rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and neuroblastoma, two common childhood cancers, the three transcripts are independently expressed to varying degrees, but one, is uniformly silenced. Although TGFβ induces certain transcripts in HeLa cells, it was unable to do so in five tested RMS lines unless the cells were pretreated with a broadly acting methyltransferase inhibitor, DZNep, or one targeting EZH2. induction by TGFβ correlated with de novo appearance of three H3K27Ac peaks within a 20 kb element ∼150 kb proximal to . Deleting that segment prevented their induction by TGFβ but not a basal increase driven by methyltransferase inhibition alone. Expression of two transcripts was enhanced by dCas9/CRISPR activation targeting either the relevant promoter or the 20 kb elements, and this "precise" manipulation diminished RMS cell propagation in vitro. Our findings show crosstalk between methyltransferase inhibition and TGFβ-dependent activation of a remote enhancer to reverse silencing. Though focused on here, such crosstalk may apply to other TGFβ-responsive genes and perhaps govern this signaling protein's complex effects promoting or blocking cancer.

Tags
Antibody
CRISPR

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Published
January, 2023

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Products used in this publication

  • CRISPR/Cas9 Antibody
    C15310258-100
    CRISPR/Cas9 Antibody - ChIP-seq Grade

 


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