4.5 Article

A Transcriptional Regulatory Role of the THAP11-HCF-1 Complex in Colon Cancer Cell Function

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 9, Pages 1654-1670

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.06033-11

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [R01 CA133755]
  2. NIH/NCI Institutional NRSA [T32 CA070085]
  3. Cancer Center [NCI CA060553]

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The recently identified Thanatos-associated protein (THAP) domain is an atypical zinc finger motif with sequence-specific DNA-binding activity. Emerging data suggest that THAP proteins may function in chromatin-dependent processes, including transcriptional regulation, but the roles of most THAP proteins in normal and aberrant cellular processes remain largely unknown. In this work, we identify THAP11 as a transcriptional regulator differentially expressed in human colon cancer. Immunohistochemical analysis of human colon cancers revealed increased THAP11 expression in both primary tumors and metastases. Knockdown of THAP11 in SW620 colon cancer cells resulted in a significant decrease in cell proliferation, and profiling of gene expression in these cells identified a novel gene set composed of 80 differentially expressed genes, 70% of which were derepressed by THAP11 knockdown. THAP11 was found to associate physically with the transcriptional coregulator HCF-1 (host cell factor 1) and recruit HCF-1 to target promoters. Importantly, THAP11-mediated gene regulation and its chromatin association require HCF-1, while HCF-1 recruitment at these genes requires THAP11. Collectively, these data provide the first characterization of THAP11-dependent gene expression in human colon cancer cells and suggest that the THAP11-HCF-1 complex may be an important transcriptional and cell growth regulator in human colon cancer.

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