Abstract

BackgroundDue to the hyper-activation of WNT signaling in a variety of cancer types, there has been a strong drive to develop pathway-specific inhibitors with the eventual goal of providing a chemotherapeutic antagonist of WNT signaling to cancer patients. A new category of drugs, called epigenetic inhibitors, are being developed that hold high promise for inhibition of the WNT pathway. The canonical WNT signaling pathway initiates when WNT ligands bind to receptors, causing the nuclear localization of the co-activator β-catenin (CTNNB1), which leads to an association of β-catenin with a member of the TCF transcription factor family at regulatory regions of WNT-responsive genes. The TCF/β-catenin complex then recruits CBP (CREBBP) or p300 (EP300), leading to histone acetylation and gene activation. A current model in the field is that CBP-driven expression of WNT target genes supports proliferation whereas p300-driven expression of WNT target genes supports differentiation. The small molecule inhibitor ICG-001 binds to CBP, but not to p300, and competitively inhibits the interaction of CBP with β-catenin. Upon treatment of cancer cells, this should reduce expression of CBP-regulated transcription, leading to reduced tumorigenicity and enhanced differentiation.ResultsWe have compared the genome-wide effects on the transcriptome after treatment with ICG-001 (the specific CBP inhibitor) versus C646, a compound that competes with acetyl-coA for the Lys-coA binding pocket of both CBP and p300. We found that both drugs cause large-scale changes in the transcriptome of HCT116 colon cancer cells and PANC1 pancreatic cancer cells and reverse some tumor-specific changes in gene expression. Interestingly, although the epigenetic inhibitors affect cell cycle pathways in both the colon and pancreatic cancer cell lines, the WNT signaling pathway was affected only in the colon cancer cells. Notably, WNT target genes were similarly downregulated after treatment of HCT116 with C646 as with ICG-001.ConclusionOur results suggest that treatment with a general HAT inhibitor causes similar effects on the transcriptome as does treatment with a CBP-specific inhibitor and that epigenetic inhibition affects the WNT pathway in HCT116 cells and the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway in PANC1 cells.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1756-8935-8-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Due to the hyper-activation of WNT signaling in a variety of cancer types, there has been a strong drive to develop pathway-specific inhibitors with the eventual goal of providing a chemotherapeutic antagonist of WNT signaling to cancer patients

  • ICG-001 and C646 have similar effects on the transcriptome of HCT116 colon cancer cells Constitutive activation of WNT target genes via a TCF/ β-catenin/CBP complex is thought to be a major driver of colorectal cancer

  • We found that ICG-001 has a similar broad specificity as C646 in HCT116 colon cancer, with both drugs decreasing the expression of cell cycle-related and WNT pathway genes

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Summary

Introduction

Due to the hyper-activation of WNT signaling in a variety of cancer types, there has been a strong drive to develop pathway-specific inhibitors with the eventual goal of providing a chemotherapeutic antagonist of WNT signaling to cancer patients. Due to the hyper-activation of WNT signaling in a variety of cancer types [1,2], there has been a strong drive to develop antagonists of WNT signaling for cancer treatment. Recent studies have revealed that different histone modifications are associated with active vs silenced chromatin, that different cell types show different epigenomic patterns of silenced vs active chromatin, and that changes in chromatin structure can have a dramatic effect on cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival. Because cancer genomes show changes in histone acetylation patterns, there is great interest in the use of acetylation inhibitors that inhibit signaling pathways linked to human cancers for epigenetic therapy [6]

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