Abstract
Alterations in genes coding for histone modifiers are found in human cancers, suggesting that histone modification is involved in malignant features of neoplastic cells. This study showed that a histone demethylase KDM4C is significant for colonosphere formation by mediating the cross talk between oncogenic pathways through a feed-forward mechanism. The expression of KDM4C gene was increased in spheres from colorectal cancer (CRC) cells and the knockdown (KD) of KDM4C eliminated colonosphere formation. We found that the KD of β-catenin, an important oncogenic factor in CRC, resulted in not only decreased sphere formation but also impaired upregulation of KDM4C gene in spheres. β-Catenin bound to the KDM4C promoter, suggesting that KDM4C is involved in the sphere-forming ability downstream of β-catenin in CRC cells. Microarray analysis identified the JAG1 gene that codes for a notch ligand Jagged1 responsible for sphere formation as a target of KDM4C. KDM4C KD decreased the expression of JAG1 gene, and the downregulation of JAG1 gene recapitulated the impaired colonosphere formation. JAG1 is also a target of β-catenin, and chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis showed the binding of β-catenin and KDM4C onto the JAG1 promoter during colonosphere formation. Importantly, KDM4C KD ruined the recruitment of β-catenin onto the JAG1 promoter independently of the H3-K9 methylation status and blunted JAG1 expression during sphere formation. These data indicate that KDM4C maintains the sphere-forming capacity in CRCs by mediating the β-catenin-dependent transcription of JAG1 in a feed-forward manner.
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