Pharmacologic disruption of Polycomb-repressive complex 2-mediated gene repression selectively induces apoptosis in cancer cells

  1. Jing Tan1,7,
  2. Xiaojing Yang1,5,7,
  3. Li Zhuang1,
  4. Xia Jiang1,
  5. Wei Chen6,
  6. Puay Leng Lee1,
  7. R.K. Murthy Karuturi4,
  8. Patrick Boon Ooi Tan3,6,
  9. Edison T. Liu2, and
  10. Qiang Yu1,8
  1. 1 Molecular Pharmacology, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore;
  2. 2 Cancer Biology, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore;
  3. 3 Cell and Medical Biology, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore;
  4. 4 Information and Mathematic Sciences, Genome Institute of Singapore, 138672, Singapore;
  5. 5 Institute of Medicinal Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing 100094, China;
  6. 6 Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School, 169547, Singapore
  1. 7 These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Polycomb-repressive complex 2 (PRC2)-mediated histone methylation plays an important role in aberrant cancer gene silencing and is a potential target for cancer therapy. Here we show that S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase inhibitor 3-Deazaneplanocin A (DZNep) induces efficient apoptotic cell death in cancer cells but not in normal cells. We found that DZNep effectively depleted cellular levels of PRC2 components EZH2, SUZ12, and EED and inhibited associated histone H3 Lys 27 methylation (but not H3 Lys 9 methylation). By integrating RNA interference (RNAi), genome-wide expression analysis, and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) studies, we have identified a prominent set of genes selectively repressed by PRC2 in breast cancer that can be reactivated by DZNep. We further demonstrate that the preferential reactivation of a set of these genes by DZNep, including a novel apoptosis affector, FBXO32, contributes to DZNep-induced apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Our results demonstrate the unique feature of DZNep as a novel chromatin remodeling compound and suggest that pharmacologic reversal of PRC2-mediated gene repression by DZNep may constitute a novel approach for cancer therapy.

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