4.8 Article

Histone methylase MLL1 has critical roles in tumor growth and angiogenesis and its knockdown suppresses tumor growth in vivo

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 32, Issue 28, Pages 3359-3370

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/onc.2012.352

Keywords

MLL1; histone methylase; xenograft; antisense; hypoxia; tumor supression

Funding

  1. NIH [1R15 ES019129-01, 2R15 CA113747-02]
  2. NSF [0821969]
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  4. Division Of Chemistry [0821969] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Mixed lineage leukemias (MLLs) are human histone H3 lysine-4-specific methyl transferases that have critical roles in gene expression, epigenetics and cancer. Herein, we demonstrated that antisense-mediated knockdown of MLL1 induced cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in cultured cells. Intriguingly, application of MLL1 antisense specifically knocked down MLL1 in vivo and suppressed the growth of xenografted cervical tumor implanted in nude mouse. MLL1 knockdown downregulated various growth and angiogenic factors, such as HIF1 alpha, VEGF and CD31, in tumor tissue affecting tumor growth. MLL1 is overexpressed along the line of vascular network and localized adjacent to endothelial cell layer expressing CD31, indicating potential roles of MLL1 in vasculogenesis. MLL1 is also overexpressed in the hypoxic regions along with HIF1 alpha. Overall, our studies demonstrated that MLL1 is a key factor in hypoxia signaling, vasculogenesis and tumor growth, and its depletion suppresses tumor growth in vivo, indicating its potential in novel cancer therapy.

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