Abstract

Testis-specific transcription factor BORIS (Brother of the Regulator of Imprinted Sites), a paralog and proposed functional antagonist of the widely expressed CTCF, is abnormally expressed in multiple tumor types and has been implicated in the epigenetic activation of cancer-testis antigens (CTAs). We have reported previously that suprabasin (SBSN), whose expression is restricted to the epidermis, is epigenetically derepressed in lung cancer. In this work, we establish that SBSN is a novel non-CTA target of BORIS epigenetic regulation. With the use of a doxycycline-inducible BORIS expressing vector, we demonstrate that relative BORIS dosage is critical for SBSN activation. At lower concentrations, BORIS induces demethylation of the SBSN CpG island and disruption and activation of chromatin around the SBSN transcription start site (TSS), resulting in a 35-fold increase in SBSN expression in the H358 human lung cancer cell line. Interestingly, increasing BORIS concentrations leads to a subsequent reduction in SBSN expression via chromatin repression. In a similar manner, increase in BORIS concentrations leads to eventual decrease of cell growth and colony formation. This is the first report demonstrating that different amount of BORIS defines its varied effects on the expression of a target gene via chromatin structure reorganization.

Highlights

  • BORIS (Brother of the Regulator of Imprinted Sites) is an 11 zinc finger, male germ line-specific transcription factor [1,2]

  • Expression of SBSN and BORIS are directly correlated We have demonstrated in 190 primary lung cancer samples that

  • SBSN is overexpressed in lung cancer and propose that SBSN expression is dependent on BORIS [9]

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Summary

Introduction

BORIS (Brother of the Regulator of Imprinted Sites) is an 11 zinc finger, male germ line-specific transcription factor [1,2]. Unlike its widely expressed paralog CTCF, BORIS is repressed in normal tissues and expressed only in the testis and in several types of human cancers, including lung, head and neck, breast, skin, and urinary cancers. It is considered a cancer-testis antigen (CTA) [2,3,4,5]. The role of BORIS in chromatin activation has been demonstrated for MAGEA1-A4 and BAG-1 genes [7,8]. We propose that BORIS may play a role in the regulation of another non-CTA oncogenic gene, SBSN [9]

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