Kostianna Sereti, Anna E Russo, Ryan Raisner, Taylur P Ma, Karen E Gascoigne
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PAX8 Interacts with the SWI/SNF Complex at Enhancers to Drive Proliferation in Ovarian Cancer.
Activation of lineage-specific gene expression programs is mediated by the recruitment of lineage-specific transcription factors and their coactivators to chromatin. The lineage factor PAX8 drives essential gene expression in ovarian cancer cells and is required for tumor proliferation. However, the molecular details surrounding cofactor recruitment and specific activation of transcription by PAX8 remain unknown. Here, we identify an important functional interaction between PAX8 and the switch/sucrose nonfermentable (SWI/SNF) chromatin remodeling complex. We show that PAX8 can recruit SWI/SNF complexes to DNA, in which they function to open chromatin and facilitate the expression of PAX8 target genes. Genetic deletion of PAX8 results in loss of SWI/SNF from PAX8-bound enhancers, loss of expression of associated target genes, and reduced proliferation. These results can be phenocopied by pharmacological inhibition of SWI/SNF ATPase activity. These data indicate that PAX8 mediates the expression of an essential ovarian cancer proliferative program in part by the recruitment of the SWI/SNF complex, highlighting a novel vulnerability in PAX8-dependent ovarian cancer. Implications: PAX8 recruits SWI/SNF complexes to enhancers to mediate the expression of genes essential for ovarian cancer proliferation.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Cancer Research publishes articles describing novel basic cancer research discoveries of broad interest to the field. Studies must be of demonstrated significance, and the journal prioritizes analyses performed at the molecular and cellular level that reveal novel mechanistic insight into pathways and processes linked to cancer risk, development, and/or progression. Areas of emphasis include all cancer-associated pathways (including cell-cycle regulation; cell death; chromatin regulation; DNA damage and repair; gene and RNA regulation; genomics; oncogenes and tumor suppressors; signal transduction; and tumor microenvironment), in addition to studies describing new molecular mechanisms and interactions that support cancer phenotypes. For full consideration, primary research submissions must provide significant novel insight into existing pathway functions or address new hypotheses associated with cancer-relevant biologic questions.