4.3 Article

Acetylation of the Cell-Fate Factor Dachshund Determines p53 Binding and Signaling Modules in Breast Cancer

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 923-935

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.1094

Keywords

p53; breast cancer; cell fate; stem cells; dach

Funding

  1. Kimmel Cancer Center NIH Cancer Center Core grant [P30CA56036]
  2. Dr. Ralph and Marian C. Falk Medical Research Trust [R21CA152784, RO1CA090465]
  3. Margaret Q. Landenberger Research Foundation
  4. Department of Defense Concept Award [W81XWH-11-1-0303]
  5. Breast Cancer Research Foundation,
  6. Pennsylvania Department of Health
  7. [R01CA070896]
  8. [R01CA075503]
  9. [R01CA086072,]
  10. [R01CA137494]

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Breast cancer is a leading form of cancer in the world. The Drosophila Dac gene was cloned as an inhibitor of the hyperactive epidermal growth factor (EGFR), ellipse. Herein, endogenous DACH1 co-localized with p53 in a nuclear, extranucleolar compartment and bound to p53 in human breast cancer cell lines, p53 and DACH1 bound common genes in Chip-Seq. Full inhibition of breast cancer contact-independent growth by DACH1 required p53. The p53 breast cancer mutants R248Q and R273H, evaded DACH1 binding. DACH1 phosphorylation at serine residue (S439) inhibited p53 binding and phosphorylation at p53 amino-terminal sites (S15, S20) enhanced DACH1 binding. DACH1 binding to p53 was inhibited by NAD-dependent deacetylation via DACH1 K628. DACH1 repressed p21(CIP1) and induced RAD51, an association found in basal breast cancer. DACH1 inhibits breast cancer cellular growth in an NAD and p53-dependent manner through direct protein-protein association.

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