Loss of tumor suppressor IGFBP4 drives epigenetic reprogramming in hepatic carcinogenesis.
Nucleic Acids Res
; 46(17): 8832-8847, 2018 09 28.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-29992318
Genomic sequencing of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) uncovers a paucity of actionable mutations, underscoring the necessity to exploit epigenetic vulnerabilities for therapeutics. In HCC, EZH2-mediated H3K27me3 represents a major oncogenic chromatin modification, but how it modulates the therapeutic vulnerability of signaling pathways remains unknown. Here, we show EZH2 acts antagonistically to AKT signaling in maintaining H3K27 methylome through epigenetic silencing of IGFBP4. ChIP-seq revealed enrichment of Ezh2/H3K27me3 at silenced loci in HBx-transgenic mouse-derived HCCs, including Igfbp4 whose down-regulation significantly correlated with EZH2 overexpression and poor survivals of HCC patients. Functional characterizations demonstrated potent growth- and invasion-suppressive functions of IGFBP4, which was associated with transcriptomic alterations leading to deregulation of multiple signaling pathways. Mechanistically, IGFBP4 stimulated AKT/EZH2 phosphorylation to abrogate H3K27me3-mediated silencing, forming a reciprocal feedback loop that suppressed core transcription factor networks (FOXA1/HNF1A/HNF4A/KLF9/NR1H4) for normal liver homeostasis. Consequently, the in vivo tumorigenicity of IGFBP4-silenced HCC cells was vulnerable to pharmacological inhibition of EZH2, but not AKT. Our study unveils chromatin regulation of a novel liver tumor suppressor IGFBP4, which constitutes an AKT-EZH2 reciprocal loop in driving H3K27me3-mediated epigenetic reprogramming. Defining the aberrant chromatin landscape of HCC sheds light into the mechanistic basis of effective EZH2-targeted inhibition.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Histones
/
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
/
Insulin-Like Growth Factor Binding Protein 4
/
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
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Histone Code
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Carcinogenesis
/
Enhancer of Zeste Homolog 2 Protein
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Liver Neoplasms
Type of study:
Prognostic_studies
Limits:
Animals
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Female
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Humans
/
Male
Language:
En
Journal:
Nucleic Acids Res
Year:
2018
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
China
Country of publication:
United kingdom