4.7 Article

Cdc6 expression represses E-cadherin transcription and activates adjacent replication origins

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 195, Issue 7, Pages 1123-1140

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201108121

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Funding

  1. European Commission [201630]
  2. Inflammation and Cancer Research in Europe [223151]
  3. INsPiRE (Integrating the Emerging Research Potential of the University of Athens Cancer Research Group in the European Research Area [REGPOT] [284460]
  4. TransPOT [285948]
  5. Empeirikeion Foundation
  6. Special Account for Research Grants-National Kapodistrian University of Athens [70/4/9913, 70/4/4281, 70/4/8916]
  7. Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research
  8. Swedish Cancer Society [4855-B03-01XAC]
  9. Cancer Research Society

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E-cadherin (CDH1) loss occurs frequently in carcinogenesis, contributing to invasion and metastasis. We observed that mouse and human epithelial cell lines overexpressing the replication licensing factor Cdc6 underwent phenotypic changes with mesenchymal features and loss of E-cadherin. Analysis in various types of human cancer revealed a strong correlation between increased Cdc6 expression and reduced E-cadherin levels. Prompted by these findings, we discovered that Cdc6 repressed CDH1 transcription by binding to the E-boxes of its promoter, leading to dissociation of the chromosomal insulator CTCF, displacement of the histone variant H2A. Z, and promoter heterochromatinization. Mutational analysis identified the Walker B motif and C-terminal region of Cdc6 as essential for CDH1 transcriptional suppression. Strikingly, CTCF displacement resulted in activation of adjacent origins of replication. These data demonstrate that Cdc6 acts as a molecular switch at the E-cadherin locus, linking transcriptional repression to activation of replication, and provide a telling example of how replication licensing factors could usurp alternative programs to fulfill distinct cellular functions.

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