4.6 Article

AP-2α Induces Epigenetic Silencing of Tumor Suppressive Genes and Microsatellite Instability in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 4, Issue 9, Pages -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0006931

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Background: Activator protein 2 alpha (AP-2 alpha) is involved in a variety of physiological processes. Increased AP-2 alpha expression correlates with progression in various squamous cell carcinomas, and a recent publication found AP-2 alpha to be overexpressed in similar to 70% of Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma (HNSCC) patient samples. It was found to repress transcription of the tumor suppressor gene C/CAAT Enhancer Binding Protein alpha (C/EBP alpha), and its binding site correlated with upstream methylation of the C/EBP alpha promoter. Therefore, we investigated the potential for AP-2 alpha to target methylation to additional genes that would be relevant to HNSCC pathogenesis. Principal Findings: Stable downregulation of AP-2 alpha stable by shRNA in HNSCC cell lines correlated with decreased methylation of its target genes' regulatory regions. Furthermore, methylation of MLH1 in HNSCC with and without AP-2 alpha downregulation revealed a correlation with microsatellite instability (MSI). ChIP analysis was used to confirm binding of AP-2 alpha and HDAC1/2 to the targets. The effects of HDAC inhibition was assessed using Trichostatin A in a HNSCC cell line, which revealed that AP-2 alpha targets methylation through HDAC recruitment. Conclusions: These findings are significant because they suggest AP-2 alpha plays a role not only in epigenetic silencing, but also in genomic instability. This intensifies the potential level of regulation AP-2 alpha has through transcriptional regulation. Furthermore, these findings have the potential to revolutionize the field of HNSCC therapy, and more generally the field of epigenetic therapy, by targeting a single gene that is involved in the malignant transformation via disrupting DNA repair and cell cycle control.

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