|
|
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 Molecular Pharmacology, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore; 2 Cancer Biology, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore; 3 Cell and Medical Biology, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore; 4 Information and Mathematic Sciences, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore; 5 Institute of Medicinal Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100094, China; 6 Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School, 169547, Singapore
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
[Keywords: EZH2; PRC2; apoptosis; breast cancer; histone methylation]
Received December 19, 2006; revised version accepted March 12, 2007.
Polycomb group (PcG) proteins are known to have the ability to promote gene repression through epigenetic modification of chromatin structure (Kennison 1995
; Levine et al. 2004
; Lund and van Lohuizen 2004
; Pirrotta 2006
). PcGs are highly conserved from Drosophila to human (Kennison 1995
; Pirrotta 1999
; Kennison 2004
) and form multiple Polycomb-repressive complexes (PRCs). PRCs contain intrinsic histone methyltransferase (HMTase) activity and maintain gene repression through methylation of core histones (Beisel et al. 2002
; Cao et al. 2002
; Milne et al. 2002
; Muller et al. 2002
; Nakamura et al. 2002
). Among PcG proteins, PRC2 is of particular importance since it has been linked to stem cell biology and cancer (Kleer et al. 2003
; Gil et al. 2005
; Bernstein et al. 2006
; Boyer et al. 2006
; Bracken et al. 2006
; Holden 2006
; Kalantry et al. 2006
; Kamminga et al. 2006
; Lee et al. 2006
). PRC2 contains three core components: EZH2, SUZ12, and EED (Levine et al. 2004
; Kuzmichev et al. 2005
). EZH2 contains the HMTase activity, and SUZ12 and EED are required for this activity (Cao and Zhang 2004
; Pasini et al. 2004
; Montgomery et al. 2005
). EZH2 catalyzes histone H3 Lys 27 (H3-K27) methylation and is required for PRC2-mediated gene repression (Cao et al. 2002
; Muller et al. 2002
; Kirmizis et al. 2004
; Kuzmichev et al. 2005
).
Human EZH2 (and its associated H3-K27 methyltransferase [MTase] activity) has been linked to cancer. It is overexpressed in metastatic prostate and breast cancer (Sellers and Loda 2002
; Varambally et al. 2002
; Bracken et al. 2003
; Kleer et al. 2003
; Rhodes et al. 2003
) and has been associated with breast cancer aggressiveness (Kleer et al. 2003
). In addition to EZH2, SUZ12 is also up-regulated in several human tumors including those of the colon, breast, and liver (Kirmizis et al. 2003
, 2004
). In cultured cells, EZH2 was found to be essential for cell proliferation, and overexpression of EZH2 promoted cell transformation (Varambally et al. 2002
; Bracken et al. 2003
). Thus, as a potential repressor of tumor suppressor genes, the PRC2 complex appears to be an attractive target for therapeutic intervention. However, the mechanism whereby the PRC2 complex promotes tumor progression has not been clearly determined, in part because little is known about the PRC2 target genes specifically repressed in cancer cells. In addition, no drug has been found thus far to perturb PRC2-mediated gene silencing for potential cancer epigenetic therapy.
3-Deazaadenosine analogs are potent inhibitors of S-adenosylhomocysteine (AdoHcy) hydrolase (Chiang and Cantoni 1979
; Liu et al. 1992
). Inhibition of AdoHcy hydrolase results in the cellular accumulation of AdoHcy, which in turn causes by-product inhibition of S-adonosyl-L-methionine-dependent MTases (Chiang and Cantoni 1979
). Although a variety of biological effects have been observed for the 3-deaza nucleosides (Chiang 1981
; Razin et al. 1988
; Chiang et al. 1992
), its effects on chromatin modifications and global gene expression have not been explored. In this study, we found that 3-Deazaneplanocin A (DZNep), one of the most potent AdoHcy hydrolase inhibitors (Glazer et al. 1986
), can induce robust apoptosis in cancer cells but not in normal cells. Importantly, DZNep appears to be a unique chromatin remodeling compound that can deplete the cellular PRC2 proteins and inhibit the associated histone methylation. We demonstrate that reactivation of PRC2-repressed genes contributes to DZNep-induced apoptosis in breast cancer cells.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We have shown previously that HDAC inhibitors promote E2F1-dependent apoptosis (Zhao et al. 2005
; Tan et al. 2006
). In an effort to find other HDACI-like compounds, we screened a National Cancer Institute library consisting of nearly 4000 compounds. From this we identified a small-molecule compound, NSC 617989, as a strong activator of oncogene E2F1-mediated apoptosis in our cellular system (X. Yang, J. Tan, and Q. Yu, unpubl.). This compound, DZNep (Fig. 1A), is a known inhibitor of AdoHcy hydrolase (Glazer et al. 1986
). We found that DZNep at 5 µM induced time-dependent cell death in breast cancer MCF-7 and colorectal cancer HCT116 cells, as determined by propidium iodide (PI) staining and flow cytometry analysis (Fig. 1B). We further demonstrated that DZNep-induced cell death proceeds through apoptosis. Figure 1C shows that DZNep treatment of MCF-7 and HCT116 cells induces marked loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (MTP) (
m), which is an indicator of mitochondrial dysfunction. Furthermore, cleavage of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), a caspase 3 substrate, was easily detectable in DZNep-treated cells (Fig. 1D). These results suggest that DZNep triggers apoptotic cell death involving mitochondria dysfunction and caspase activation.
|
DZNep depletes PRC2 proteins and inhibits histone H3-K27 methylation
We next investigated the molecular mechanism of DZNep-induced apoptosis in cancer cells. Because DZNep produced a similar phenotype as that caused by HDACI in our cellular screening and PRC2-mediated gene repression depends on HDAC activity (van der Vlag and Otte 1999
; Varambally et al. 2002
), we explored the possibility that DNZep might interfere with PRC2 proteins and related histone methylations.
As shown by Western blot analysis (Fig. 2A), treatment of MCF-7 or HCT116 cells with 5 µM DZNep for 48 and 72 h resulted in the dramatic decrease in protein levels of the three PRC2 components: SUZ12, EZH2, and EED. In agreement with the previous findings that H3-K27 is a specific substrate of PRC2 HMTase (Cao et al. 2002
), trimethylation of histone 3 at Lys 27 (H3-K27me3) was strongly reduced in DZNep-treated cells. In contrast, histone H3 trimethylation at Lys 9 (H3-K9me3)which is mediated by another histone MTase, Suv39h1 (Rea et al. 2000
; Peters et al. 2001
; Lehnertz et al. 2003
)was not affected by DZNep treatment. In addition, DZNep treatment did not affect histone H3 acetylation. The expression level of the DNA MTases, known to be depleted upon DNMT inhibitor treatment (Velicescu et al. 2002
; Cheng et al. 2004
), remained unchanged with DZNep. Also in line with the previous demonstrations that PRC2 has no effect on H3-K27 monomethylation (Cao and Zhang 2004
; Pasini et al. 2004
), we found that DZNep did not inhibit monomethylation of H3-K27. DZNep treatment also resulted in the loss of another repressive histone mark, H4-K20 trimethylation (Fig. 2B). Thus, the effect of DZNep on H3-K27 methylation was selective but not specific.
|
To investigate whether the reduction of the PRC2 proteins is due to the reduced expression of PRC2 mRNAs, we performed RTPCR analysis. Figure 2D shows that the mRNA levels of each of the PRC2 proteins remained unchanged after DZNep treatment, indicating that the decrease in PRC2 components is a result of a post-transcriptional mechanism. It is known that PRC2 complex is subjected to proteosome-mediated degradation (Pasini et al. 2004
). To determine if the DZNep-induced depletion of the PRC2 complex is caused by protein degradation, we treated MCF-7 cells with DZNep in the presence or absence of three different proteosome inhibitors (MG132, LLNL, and MG115). As shown in Figure 2E, treatment with each proteosome inhibitor at least in part prevented the down-regulation of EZH2 and SUZ12 protein levels in response to DZNep. These results demonstrated that DZNep depleted the PRC2 proteins through increased protein degradation.
We next explored whether the decrease in the PRC2 complex is responsible for DZNep-induced apoptosis. The expression level of EZH2 mRNA in MCF-7 cells was fivefold higher than that in MCF-10A cells (data not shown), and thus we used these two cell lines to test whether knockdown of PRC2 proteins (EZH2, EED, and SUZ12) would result in apoptosis in these cells. Western blot analysis of small interfering RNA (siRNA)-treated MCF-7 cells for 72 h confirmed the knockdown efficiency (Fig. 2F). Notably, the knockdown of each of the PRC2 proteins resulted in the down-regulation of the other two components, a result in agreement with the previous finding that the protein level of each PRC2 component is dependent on the presence of the other members of the complex (Pasini et al. 2004
). As an expected result of PRC2 knockdown, histone H3-K27 trimethylation was markedly reduced, while the H3-K9 trimethylation and total H3 levels remained unchanged (Fig. 2F). Notably, PRC2 siRNA treatments resulted in significant apoptosis in MCF-7 cells compared with MCF-7 cells receiving a control siRNA, whereas PRC2 siRNA did not induce apoptosis in MCF-10A cells (Fig. 2G). These findings indicate that DZNep-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cells resulted, at least in part, from the decrease in the PRC2 complex.
Identification of PRC2-repressed genes reactivated by DZNep in breast cancer cells
As our data suggest that the induction of apoptosis by DZNep in cancer cells may be due to the release of PRC2-mediated transcriptional repression, we next sought to determine a common set of target genes repressed by PRC2/H3K27me3, which can be reactivated upon DZNep treatment. We focused these studies on breast cancer cells since EZH2 expression levels in MCF-7 cells are fivefold higher compared with MCF-10A cells (data not shown). Using the same siRNA strategy as above, we first analyzed the changes in global gene expression after individual knockdown of the three core components of PRC2 (EZH2, SUZ12, and EED) using Illumina 24K Gene Expression BeadChips. Subsequent data analysis revealed 708, 684, and 572 genes up-regulated more than twofold after EZH2, EED, and SUZ12 siRNA treatment, respectively. In total, there were 1402 genes whose expression was increased upon knockdown of at least one out of three PRC2 proteins. To be inclusive, we considered all 1402 genes to be potential PRC2 target genes in subsequent analyses.
We next performed an array analysis to identify genes up-regulated by DZNep. Treatment of MCF-7 cells with DZNep for 72 h led to the up-regulation of 751 genes twofold or greater. Comparing this DZNep-inducible gene list with the 1402 candidate PRC2 target gene list, we identified an overlap of 140 genes (p < 0.0001) (Fig. 3A). We consider these 140 genes to be PRC2-repressed targets that can be transcriptionally reactivated by DZNep. The remaining 611 genes induced by DZNep but apparently unaffected by PRC2 knockdown may represent targets repressed by other MTases, as DZNep would also inhibit their function.
|
Gene Ontology (GO) analysis revealed that these genes were remarkably enriched for their roles in growth inhibition or apoptosis, as seen in TGFBI and IGFBP3 (Fig. 3E). Thus, these genes are likely to be putative tumor suppressors of the malignant phenotype epigenetically silenced or repressed by PRC2 in breast cancers. Preferential reactivation of PRC2-repressed growth control genes in cancer cells relative to the normal cells might explain the cancer selectivity of DZNep.
To determine whether our findings in cancer cell lines are representative of primary breast tumors, we queried a gene expression data set of 28 primary breast tumor samples and nine normal breast tissues for the expression of our 44 genes specifically repressed by PRC2 in MCF-7 cells. Of these 44 genes, 34 unique probes were found to be present in this Affymetrix array data set. Together with EZH2, SUZ12, and EED, this gene set clearly separated the tumor and normal samples by using unsupervised cluster analysis (Fig. 3F). A subset of 17 genes (Cluster I) showed lower expression in breast tumors relative to the normal breast tissues, which, as expected, was correlated with the higher EZH2 and SUZ12 expression in breast tumors. These data strongly suggest that this subset of PRC2 targets is the clinically relevant one whose expression is repressed in primary human breast cancers.
Effect of DZNep on PRC2 and RNA polymerase II (RNA Pol II) occupancy on target promoters
We next used chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) to determine whether PRC2 binds to the target gene promoters described above, and whether this binding is affected by DZNep treatment. To gain further mechanistic insight, we also analyzed the promoter occupancy for RNA Pol II, as RNA Pol II and PRC2 are known to occupy gene promoters in a mutually exclusive manner (Lee et al. 2006
; Vire et al. 2006
). We reasoned that the depletion of PRC2 by DZNep would result in increased RNA Pol II recruitment to the PRC2 target gene promoters. We examined eight candidate PRC2 target gene promoters using ChIP PCR primers designed within the core promoter region (Fig. 4A); 95% of PRC2-binding sites are known to localize to within 1 kb of the transcription start site of a gene with or without a CpG island (Lee et al. 2006
). As shown by ChIP analysis performed using SUZ12 or RNA Pol II antibodies, untreated MCF-7 cells displayed strong binding of SUZ12 to all eight gene promoters, whereas only background or minimal binding was detected in nonspecific IgG or RNA Pol II pull-down samples (Fig. 4B). Forty-eight hours after treatment with DZNep, SUZ12 binding was markedly reduced, and Pol II binding increased on all eight promoters. Taken together with the re-expression of these genes after depletion of PRC2 by DZNep, these findings confirmed that PRC2 binding to these gene promoters is required for their transcriptional repression. Disruption of PRC2 proteins by DZNep reduced this binding, resulting in the increased recruitment of RNA Pol II and transcriptional activation of these PRC2 target genes.
|
It has been shown that EZH2 can directly control DNA methylation through the recruitment of DNMT to certain PRC2 target gene promoters (Vire et al. 2006
). This raises the possibility that DZNep-mediated reactivation of PRC2 target genes might be the result of DNA demethylation. If so, the treatment of MCF-7 cells with the DNA demethylating agent 5-AzaC or in combination with the HDACI trichostatin A (TSA) should also be able to reactivate these genes. To test this hypothesis, we used the same BeadArray expression analysis on MCF-7 cells treated with either 5-AzaC alone or with TSA and compared this with the previously profiled DZNep-treated MCF-7 cells. The 140 genes we previously identified as PRC2-repressed and DZNep-activated in MCF-7 cells (see above) did not show significant activation upon either 5-AzaC or 5-AzaC/TSA treatment as compared with DZNep (Fig. 5A, left panel). However, as a positive control for 5-AzaC and 5-AzaC/TSA treatment, p18INK4C expression showed a strong induction (threefold and 18-fold, respectively) (Fig. 5A, right panel). Thirteen of the 140 PRC2 target genes (
10%) were increased threefold or greater upon combined treatment of 5-AzaC and TSA (see Supplementary Table S2), suggesting that only a small portion of DZNep-induced PRC2 target genes can be induced through DNA methylation. However, this did not appear to be the case for the remaining PRC2 targets since the same treatment did not induce their expression.
|
Identification of PRC2 target genes associated with cellular sensitivity to DZNep
To determine whether our DZNep observations in MCF-7 cells were consistent with other breast cancer cell lines, we treated MDA-MB-468, SK-BR-3, MDA-MB-231, T47D, and BT-549 cell lines with DZNep. The apoptotic response in a time-course analysis revealed that these cell lines exhibited a varied sensitivity to DZNep. Similar to MCF-7 cells, MDA-MB-468, SK-BR-3, and T47D cells were highly susceptible to DZNep-induced cell death. In contrast, the response of the MDA-MB-231 and BT-549 cell lines was similar to the noncancerous MCF-10A cells; that is, they were resistant to DZNep-induced cell death (Fig. 6A).
|
The resistant cell phenotype is not due to the inability of DZNep to deplete the PRC2 complex, as depletion was evident in all these cell lines (Fig. 6E). In addition, the 22 genes expressed in the resistant cell lines but repressed in the sensitive cell lines did not undergo further increases upon DZNep treatment. This indicates that, although present in these resistant cells, PRC2 is not functional to repress their transcription, perhaps due to a lack of additional factors (e.g., DNMT and HDAC) required for the epigenetic control of these genes.
Reactivation of FBXO32 plays a crucial role in mediating DZNep-induced apoptosis
In order to investigate the functional significance of the seven genes we identified above as potential mediators of the DZNep death response, we used siRNA technology to limit their up-regulation upon DZNep treatment of MCF-7 cells. Dharmacon SMARTpool siRNAs were introduced into the cells prior to treatment with DZNep, and apoptosis was measured after 3 d. Of the seven genes, the knockdown of FBXO32 was the only one that significantly reduced the apoptotic response to DZNep (Fig. 7A). To further validate the effect of FBXO32 siRNA and to exclude the possibility of off-target effects of the RNA interference (RNAi) we synthesized a different FBXO32 siRNA, which gave a virtually identical result (Fig. 7B). To further substantiate this finding, we created cell lines derived from MCF-7 that constitutively expressed a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) targeting FBXO32 or a nonspecific control shRNA. Two independent, stable clonal lines expressing the FBXO32 shRNA had greatly reduced magnitudes of FBXO32 reactivation upon treatment with DZNep (Fig. 7C). Accordingly, DZNep-induced apoptosis in these cells was strongly inhibited compared with the shRNA control MCF-7 cell line. This decreased apoptosis was measured by three independent means: by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis measuring either sub-G1 population or MTP (Fig. 7D,E), and by PARP cleavage using Western blot analysis (Fig. 7F). These experiments strongly indicate that the reactivation of FBXO32 in MCF-7 cells is required for efficient apoptosis induction by DZNep. Although removal of other apoptosis-associated PRC2 targets such as TGFBI and IGFBP3 alone did not seem to cause significant inhibition of DZNep-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cells, their coordinated and collective activation might still contribute to the DZNep-induced apoptotic process under different cellular contexts. Our data suggest that the level of expression of FBXO32 in breast cancer cells, together with other PRC2 targets, as well as the extent to be induced by DZNep appear to be an important determinant of DZNep-induced apoptosis in breast cancer cells.
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
As an AdoHcy hydrolase inhibitor, DZNep interferes with AdoMetAdoHcy metabolism and can cause reduced methylation reaction indirectly (Glazer et al. 1986
). Unlike DNA hypomethylating agents such as 5'-AzaC and zebularine that deplete DNMTs (Velicescu et al. 2002
; Cheng et al. 2004
), this compound appears to have no effect on DNMTs but induces efficient depletion of the PRC2 proteins and the associated histone-H3-K27 methylation. Interestingly, DZNep appears to have no effect on Suv39h1 and the associated H3-K9 methylation, although the reason for this remains to be determined. The depletion of PRC2 proteins after DZNep treatment is not achieved via transcriptional inhibition since DZNep treatment did not affect their mRNA levels. Instead, it is at least in part mediated through proteosomal degradation since proteosome inhibitors can restore PRC2 protein expression. Unlike 5-AzaC and zebularine that deplete DNMTs by incorporating and thus trapping them to the substituted DNA (Cheng et al. 2004
), DZNep is not phosphorylated and does not get incorporated into DNA (Glazer et al. 1986
; Tseng et al. 1989
). Thus it seems highly unlikely that DZNep depletes PRC2 proteins through a similar mechanism. It is unclear how all three PRC2 proteins are degraded upon DZNep treatment. However, it is known that down-regulation of one PRC2 component can result in the degradation of the other two in the complex since the integrity of this complex depends on the existence of each component (Bracken et al. 2003
; Pasini et al. 2004
; Montgomery et al. 2005
). Thus, it is possible that inhibition of AdoHcy hydrolase by DZNep might affect one of the core PRC2 components, resulting in the instability of the whole complex and subsequent inhibition of H3-K27 methylation.
Since AdoMet-dependent methylation is involved in many cellular processes (Chiang et al. 1996
), targeting AdoHcy hydrolase by DZNep is expected to inhibit the activities of multiple MTases. Indeed, we found that DZNep treatment also inhibited methylation of another repressive histone mark, H4-K20 methylation, suggesting that other histone MTases could also be susceptible to inhibition by DZNep. This might explain why only 140 out of 751 DZNep-activated genes appeared to be regulated by EZH2. The induction of the rest of the genes could be the result of inhibition of MTases other than EZH2, and they might also be involved in DZNep-induced apoptosis. Nevertheless, the immediate effects of DZNep on PRC2 and H3-K27 methylation, as well as target gene activation for apoptosis, demonstrate that DZNep-induced apoptosis is, at least in part, related to its ability to inhibit the PRC2 pathway. Until now, DZNep has been explored for antiviral treatment (De Clercq et al. 1989
) and has been shown to have minimal toxicity in vivo (Bray et al. 2000
). Regardless of the exact mechanism, its intriguing apoptotic activity in cancer cells but not in normal cells, together with the important cancer epigenetic pathway it affects, makes it a promising drug candidate for anti-cancer treatment.
Guided by pharmacological, genomic, and functional analysis, we identified a group of PRC2 targets that appeared to be repressed in both breast cancer cells and primary breast tumors. Further analysis of breast cancer cell lines showing resistant or sensitive response to DZNep led to identification of a set of PRC2 target genes that are associated with cellular sensitivity to DZNep. Among those are TGFBI, IGFBP3, and PPPIR15A, which are previously known to be involved in apoptosis or growth control. In particular, we functionally validated a novel cell death regulator, FBXO32, whose reactivation appeared to be required for the efficient apoptosis induction by DZNep. FBXO32 encodes MAFbx (muscle atrophy F-box protein, also called atrogin-1), which belongs to the F-box protein family as part of the SCF ubiquitin protein E3 ligase complex. The role of FBXO32 in negatively regulating cell survival has been implicated in a previous finding showing that its expression could be inhibited by the prosurvival PI3K/Akt pathway (Stitt et al. 2004
). Importantly, we confirmed the repressed expression of FBXO32 in primary breast tumors relative to the normal tissues. Recently, two other members of the F-box family, FBXW7 and FBX4, have been shown to function as tumor suppressors by targeting multiple oncogenic proteins such as Myc, cyclin E, or cyclin D1 for ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation (Welcker et al. 2004
; Minella and Clurman 2005
; Fujii et al. 2006
; Lin et al. 2006
). Therefore, FBXO32 seems to be a PRC2-repressed target gene with a potential tumor suppressor function.
Although individual knockdown of other apoptosis-associated PRC2 targets seems to be insufficient to inhibit DZNep-induced apoptosis, their contribution to this apoptotic process in a collective or coordinated manner, depending on the cellular context, should not be ruled out. This small set of genes might serve as a surrogate marker for predicting the response of DZNep to breast cancer cells and guide the selection of the subset of breast cancer patients for PRC2-targeted therapy in the future. Our study suggests that the loss of expression of growth control PRC2 target genes in some cancer cells might create an "epigenetic addiction," in which cancer cells depend on their silenced expression for a growth advantage. Restored expression of these genes will result in growth inhibition or apoptosis, pointing to a novel therapeutic approach leading to the preferential killing of tumor versus nontumor cells. Furthermore, given the role of PRC2 and histone methylation in stem cell maintenance (Sparmann and van Lohuizen 2006
), it is conceivable that inhibiting PRC2 and associated histone methylation might also have implications in targeting cancer stem cells.
In addition to catalyzing H3-K27 methylation, PRC2 also recruits DNMT to methylated cytosines at CpG sites in the promoter regions of certain PRC2 target genes (Vire et al. 2006
). Although DZNep presumably can inhibit multiple methylation reactions, we found that its ability to activate the PRC2-repressed genes might not be the result of inhibition of DNA methylation in general. This conclusion was supported by using both pharmacological and DNA methylation analyses. Only
10% of PRC2 target genes can be induced by the DNMT inhibitor 5'-AzaC or 5'-AzaC plus HDAC inhibitor TSA, suggesting that PRC2-linked DNA hypermethylation appears to be operative only in a proportion of the PRC2 targets. In addition, many of the PRC2 targets we examined in MCF-7 cells were found to be hypomethylated in CpGsites we examined. For the small numbers of highly methylated PRC2 targets, DZNep indeed induced their demethylation in some CpG sites, but this demethylation event alone is insufficient for the robust gene activation induced by DZNep because demethylation of the same CpG sites by 5'-AzaC or 5'-AzaC plus TSA did not activate their expression. Therefore, the effects of DZNep on chromatin are distinguishable from other chromatin remodeling agents such as DNMT and HDAC inhibitors, and DZNep appears to be the first compound capable of reactivating gene expression by modulating PRC2 and associated histone methylations. Moreover, the unique effects of DZNep on chromatin remodeling make its use in combination with other chromatin remodeling agents an attractive approach to synergistically restoring abnormally silenced genes in cancer.
Taken together, our work underscores the importance of PRC2-mediated gene repression in maintaining survival of cancer cells. Our identification of AdoHcy hydrolase inhibitor DZNep, which can reverse PRC2 and histone methylation-mediated gene silencing and effectively induce cancer cell death, opens the therapeutic potential of inhibiting this epigenetic regulator. We anticipate the therapeutic index of PRC2 and histone methylation-directed therapies to be inherently high since normal cells appear to have a less active repressor function of the PRC2 complex compared with tumor cells.
| Materials and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Cell lines used in this study were purchased from the American Type Culture Collection. Cells were maintained in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 2 mM L-glutamine, and 5000 U/mL penicillin/streptomycin and maintained at 37°C with 5% CO2. For drug treatment, cells were seeded the day before the drug treatment. Cells were treated with 5 µM DZNep or 2 µM 5-AzaC (Sigma) for 72 h, and TSA (Sigma) at 100 nM for 24 h. For 5-AzaC treatment, the medium was replaced with freshly added 5-AzaC for every 24 h. For cotreatment of cells with 5-AzaC and TSA, 5-AzaC was added for 48 h, followed by TSA for 24 h.
RNAi
Specific siRNA oligos targeting EZH2, SUZ12, and EED mRNAs were described previously (Cao and Zhang 2004
; Kirmizis et al. 2004
; Bracken et al. 2006
). The SMARTpool siRNA reagents of selected PRC2 targets and the nontargeting control were purchased from Dharmacon. A separate FBXO32 siRNA targeting the sequence 5'-GTCACATCCTTTCCTGGAA-3' was obtained from Sigma-Proligo. Cells were transfected with 50 nM final concentration of siRNA duplexes using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) following the manufacturers instructions. To generate FBXO32 shRNA stable cells, the FBXO32 siRNA sequence or a nontargeting control siRNA sequence was cloned into the pSIREN-RetroQ retroviral expression vector (BD Bioscience) according to the manufacturers instruction. Virally infected cells were selected in a medium containing 2 µg/mL puromycin, and individual drug-resistant clones were collected, pooled, and expanded.
Immunoblot analysis
Cells were scraped, collected, and lysed in RIPA buffer as described previously (Kho et al. 2004
). To release histones from chromatin, cell lysates were further sonicated for 15 sec using a XL2000 Microson Ultrasonic Processor (Misonix). Equal amounts of protein (50 µg) were separated on SDSpolyacrylamide gels and transferred to PVDF membranes. The blots were probed with antibodies against EED (07-368), SUZ12 (07-379), SUV39H1 (07-550), trimethylated H3-K27 (07-449), trimethylated H3-K9 (07-442), monomethylated H3-K27 (07-448), dimethylated H3-K27 (07-452), and Acetyl-Histone H3 (06-599), which were purchased from Upstate Biotechnology. Trimethylated H4-K20 (ab9053) was from Abcam. EZH2 (AC22) and Histone H3 (3H1) were from Cell Signaling. Antibodies against DNMT1 and DNMT3B were purchased from Alexis Biochemicals.
Flow cytometric analysis
Cells were harvested and fixed in 70% ethanol. Fixed cells were stained with PI (50 µg/mL) after treatment with RNase (100 µg/mL). The stained cells were analyzed for DNA content by FACS in a FACSCalibur (Becton Dickinson Instrument). Cell cycle fractions were quantified using the CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson). To measure MTP, cells were stained with JC-1, according to the manufacturers instructions (BD Bioscience), and cells positive for JC-1 detection were measured using CellQuest software (BD Bioscience).
Microarray analysis and quantitative real-time PCR
Total RNA was isolated from cell lines using Trizol (Invitrogen) and purified with the RNAeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen). Reverse transcription was performed using an RNA Amplification kit (Ambion). The microarray hybridization was performed using the Illumina Gene Expression BeadChip (Illumina) and data analysis was performed using GeneSpring software from Agilent Technologies. Gene expression of normal and primary breast tumor samples was performed using Affymetrix U133A GeneChips (Affymetrix) following the manufacturers instructions. Gene expression data from individual arrays were normalized by median centering and average linkage hierarchical clustering was done using Cluster and Treeview software (http://rana.lbl.gov/EisenSoftware.htm). Quantitative real-time PCR was performed on a PRISM 7900 Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) using TaqMan probes (Applied Biosystems). Samples were normalized to the levels of 18S ribosomal RNA.
ChIP assays
ChIP assays were performed as described previously (Zhao et al. 2005
). MCF-7 cells were treated with or without DZNep (5 µM) for 48 h. Precleared chromatin from 2 x 107 MCF7 cells were immunoprecipitated with anti-SUZ12 (07-379, Upstate Biotechnology), anti-RNA polymerase II (sc-899, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), and a nonspecific IgG (sc-2027, Santa Cruz Biotechnology). The ChIP-precipitated DNA and input DNA were subjected to PCR analysis. The PCR primers are listed in Supplementary Table S5.
DNA methylation analysis
Customer service for DNA methylation analysis was performed by Sequenom, Inc., using the MassARRAY system as previously described (Ehrich et al. 2005
).
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
E-MAIL yuq{at}gis.a-star.edu.sg; FAX 65-6478-9003. ![]()
Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.
Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1524107
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Beisel, C., Imhof, A., Greene, J., Kremmer, E., and Sauer, F. 2002. Histone methylation by the Drosophila epigenetic transcriptional regulator Ash1. Nature 419: 857862.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bernstein, B.E., Mikkelsen, T.S., Xie, X., Kamal, M., Huebert, D.J., Cuff, J., Fry, B., Meissner, A., Wernig, M., Plath, K., et al. 2006. A bivalent chromatin structure marks key developmental genes in embryonic stem cells. Cell 125: 315326.[CrossRef][Medline]
Boyer, L.A., Plath, K., Zeitlinger, J., Brambrink, T., Medeiros, L.A., Lee, T.I., Levine, S.S., Wernig, M., Tajonar, A., Ray, M.K., et al. 2006. Polycomb complexes repress developmental regulators in murine embryonic stem cells. Nature 441: 349353.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bracken, A.P., Pasini, D., Capra, M., Prosperini, E., Colli, E., and Helin, K. 2003. EZH2 is downstream of the pRBE2F pathway, essential for proliferation and amplified in cancer. EMBO J. 22: 53235335.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bracken, A.P., Dietrich, N., Pasini, D., Hansen, K.H., and Helin, K. 2006. Genome-wide mapping of Polycomb target genes unravels their roles in cell fate transitions. Genes & Dev. 20: 11231136.
Bray, M., Driscoll, J., and Huggins, J.W. 2000. Treatment of lethal Ebola virus infection in mice with a single dose of an S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase inhibitor. Antiviral Res. 45: 135147.[CrossRef][Medline]
Cao, R. and Zhang, Y. 2004. SUZ12 is required for both the histone methyltransferase activity and the silencing function of the EEDEZH2 complex. Mol. Cell 15: 5767.[CrossRef][Medline]
Cao, R., Wang, L., Wang, H., Xia, L., Erdjument-Bromage, H., Tempst, P., Jones, R.S., and Zhang, Y. 2002. Role of histone H3 lysine 27 methylation in Polycomb-group silencing. Science 298: 10391043.
Cheng, J.C., Yoo, C.B., Weisenberger, D.J., Chuang, J., Wozniak, C., Liang, G., Marquez, V.E., Greer, S., Orntoft, T.F., Thykjaer, T., et al. 2004. Preferential response of cancer cells to zebularine. Cancer Cell 6: 151158.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chiang, P.K. 1981. Conversion of 3T3-L1 fibroblasts to fat cells by an inhibitor of methylation: Effect of 3-deazaadenosine. Science 211: 11641166.
Chiang, P.K. and Cantoni, G.L. 1979. Perturbation of biochemical transmethylations by 3-deazaadenosine in vivo. Biochem. Pharmacol. 28: 18971902.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chiang, P.K., Burbelo, P.D., Brugh, S.A., Gordon, R.K., Fukuda, K., and Yamada, Y. 1992. Activation of collagen IV gene expression in F9 teratocarcinoma cells by 3-deazaadenosine analogs. Indirect inhibitors of methylation. J. Biol. Chem. 267: 49884991.
Chiang, P.K., Gordon, R.K., Tal, J., Zeng, G.C., Doctor, B.P., Pardhasaradhi, K., and McCann, P.P. 1996. S-Adenosylmethionine and methylation. FASEB J. 10: 471480.[Abstract]
De Clercq, E., Cools, M., Balzarini, J., Marquez, V.E., Borcherding, D.R., Borchardt, R.T., Drach, J.C., Kitaoka, S., and Konno, T. 1989. Broad-spectrum antiviral activities of neplanocin A, 3-deazaneplanocin A, and their 5'-nor derivatives. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 33: 12911297.
Ehrich, M., Nelson, M.R., Stanssens, P., Zabeau, M., Liloglou, T., Xinarianos, G., Cantor, C.R., Field, J.K., and van den Boom, D. 2005. Quantitative high-throughput analysis of DNA methylation patterns by base-specific cleavage and mass spectrometry. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 102: 1578515790.
Feinberg, A.P. and Tycko, B. 2004. The history of cancer epigenetics. Nat. Rev. Cancer 4: 143153.[Medline]
Fraga, M.F., Ballestar, E., Villar-Garea, A., Boix-Chornet, M., Espada, J., Schotta, G., Bonaldi, T., Haydon, C., Ropero, S., Petrie, K., et al. 2005. Loss of acetylation at Lys16 and trimethylation at Lys20 of histone H4 is a common hallmark of human cancer. Nat. Genet. 37: 391400.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fujii, Y., Yada, M., Nishiyama, M., Kamura, T., Takahashi, H., Tsunematsu, R., Susaki, E., Nakagawa, T., Matsumoto, A., and Nakayama, K.I. 2006. Fbxw7 contributes to tumor suppression by targeting multiple proteins for ubiquitin-dependent degradation. Cancer Sci. 97: 729736.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gil, J., Bernard, D., and Peters, G. 2005. Role of polycomb group proteins in stem cell self-renewal and cancer. DNA Cell Biol. 24: 117125.[CrossRef][Medline]
Glazer, R.I., Hartman, K.D., Knode, M.C., Richard, M.M., Chiang, P.K., Tseng, C.K., and Marquez, V.E. 1986. 3-Deazaneplanocin: A new and potent inhibitor of S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase and its effects on human promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL-60. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 135: 688694.[CrossRef][Medline]
Holden, C. 2006. Development. Gene-suppressing proteins reveal secrets of stem cells. Science 312: 349.[Medline]
Jones, P.A. and Baylin, S.B. 2002. The fundamental role of epigenetic events in cancer. Nat. Rev. Genet. 3: 415428.[Medline]
Kalantry, S., Mills, K.C., Yee, D., Otte, A.P., Panning, B., and Magnuson, T. 2006. The Polycomb group protein Eed protects the inactive X-chromosome from differentiation-induced reactivation. Nat. Cell Biol. 8: 195202.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kamminga, L.M., Bystrykh, L.V., de Boer, A., Houwer, S., Douma, J., Weersing, E., Dontje, B., and de Haan, G. 2006. The Polycomb group gene Ezh2 prevents hematopoietic stem cell exhaustion. Blood 107: 21702179.
Kennison, J.A. 1995. The Polycomb and trithorax group proteins of Drosophila: Trans-regulators of homeotic gene function. Annu. Rev. Genet. 29: 289303.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kennison, J.A. 2004. Introduction to Trx-G and Pc-G genes. Methods Enzymol. 377: 6170.[Medline]
Kho, P.S., Wang, Z., Zhuang, L., Li, Y., Chew, J.L., Ng, H.H., Liu, E.T., and Yu, Q. 2004. p53-regulated transcriptional program associated with genotoxic stress-induced apoptosis. J. Biol. Chem. 279: 2118321192.
Kirmizis, A., Bartley, S.M., and Farnham, P.J. 2003. Identification of the polycomb group protein SU(Z)12 as a potential molecular target for human cancer therapy. Mol. Cancer Ther. 2: 113121.
Kirmizis, A., Bartley, S.M., Kuzmichev, A., Margueron, R., Reinberg, D., Green, R., and Farnham, P.J. 2004. Silencing of human polycomb target genes is associated with methylation of histone H3 Lys 27. Genes & Dev. 18: 15921605.
Kleer, C.G., Cao, Q., Varambally, S., Shen, R., Ota, I., Tomlins, S.A., Ghosh, D., Sewalt, R.G., Otte, A.P., Hayes, D.F., et al. 2003. EZH2 is a marker of aggressive breast cancer and promotes neoplastic transformation of breast epithelial cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 100: 1160611611.
Kuzmichev, A., Margueron, R., Vaquero, A., Preissner, T.S., Scher, M., Kirmizis, A., Ouyang, X., Brockdorff, N., Abate-Shen, C., Farnham, P., et al. 2005. Composition and histone substrates of polycomb repressive group complexes change during cellular differentiation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 102: 18591864.
Lee, T.I., Jenner, R.G., Boyer, L.A., Guenther, M.G., Levine, S.S., Kumar, R.M., Chevalier, B., Johnstone, S.E., Cole, M.F., Isono, K., et al. 2006. Control of developmental regulators by Polycomb in human embryonic stem cells. Cell 125: 301313.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lehnertz, B., Ueda, Y., Derijck, A.A., Braunschweig, U., Perez-Burgos, L., Kubicek, S., Chen, T., Li, E., Jenuwein, T., and Peters, A.H. 2003. Suv39h-mediated histone H3 lysine 9 methylation directs DNA methylation to major satellite repeats at pericentric heterochromatin. Curr. Biol. 13: 11921200.[CrossRef][Medline]
Levine, S.S., King, I.F., and Kingston, R.E. 2004. Division of labor in polycomb group repression. Trends Biochem. Sci. 29: 478485.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lin, D.I., Barbash, O., Kumar, K.G., Weber, J.D., Harper, J.W., Klein-Szanto, A.J., Rustgi, A., Fuchs, S.Y., and Diehl, J.A. 2006. Phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitination of cyclin D1 by the SCF(FBX4-
B crystallin) complex. Mol. Cell 24: 355366.[CrossRef][Medline]
Liu, S., Wolfe, M.S., and Borchardt, R.T. 1992. Rational approaches to the design of antiviral agents based on S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase as a molecular target. Antiviral Res. 19: 247265.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lund, A.H. and van Lohuizen, M. 2004. Polycomb complexes and silencing mechanisms. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 16: 239246.[CrossRef][Medline]
Marks, P.A., Richon, V.M., Miller, T., and Kelly, W.K. 2004. Histone deacetylase inhibitors. Adv. Cancer Res. 91: 137168.[CrossRef][Medline]
Milne, T.A., Briggs, S.D., Brock, H.W., Martin, M.E., Gibbs, D., Allis, C.D., and Hess, J.L. 2002. MLL targets SET domain methyltransferase activity to Hox gene promoters. Mol. Cell 10: 11071117.[CrossRef][Medline]
Minella, A.C. and Clurman, B.E. 2005. Mechanisms of tumor suppression by the SCF(Fbw7). Cell Cycle 4: 13561359.[Medline]
Montgomery, N.D., Yee, D., Chen, A., Kalantry, S., Chamberlain, S.J., Otte, A.P., and Magnuson, T. 2005. The murine polycomb group protein Eed is required for global histone H3 lysine-27 methylation. Curr. Biol. 15: 942947.[CrossRef][Medline]
Muller, J., Hart, C.M., Francis, N.J., Vargas, M.L., Sengupta, A., Wild, B., Miller, E.L., OConnor, M.B., Kingston, R.E., and Simon, J.A. 2002. Histone methyltransferase activity of a Drosophila Polycomb group repressor complex. Cell 111: 197208.[CrossRef]