The Breast Cancer Oncogene EMSY Represses Transcription of Antimetastatic microRNA miR-31
Article 2014 en
Authors
EV
Emmanuelle Viré
CC
Christina Curtis
VD
Verónica Dávalos
Abstract
1 min read
Amplification of the EMSY gene in sporadic breast and ovarian cancers is a poor prognostic indicator. Although EMSY has been linked to transcriptional silencing, its mechanism of action is unknown. Here, we report that EMSY acts as an oncogene, causing the transformation of cells in vitro and potentiating tumor formation and metastatic features in vivo. We identify an inverse correlation between EMSY amplification and miR-31 expression, an antimetastatic microRNA, in the METABRIC cohort of human breast samples. Re-expression of miR-31 profoundly reduced cell migration, invasion, and colony-formation abilities of cells overexpressing EMSY or haboring EMSY amplification. We show that EMSY is recruited to the miR-31 promoter by the DNA binding factor ETS-1, and it represses miR-31 transcription by delivering the H3K4me3 demethylase JARID1b/PLU-1/KDM5B. Altogether, these results suggest a pathway underlying the role of EMSY in breast cancer and uncover potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets in sporadic breast cancer.
Emmanuelle Viré, Christina Curtis, Verónica Dávalos, Anna Git, Samuel C. Robson, Alberto Villanueva, August Vidal, Isaia Barbieri, Samuel Aparício, Manel Esteller, Carlos Caldas, Tony Kouzarides
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.