Abstract
BackgroundA common aberration in cancer is the activation of germline-specific proteins. The DNA-binding proteins among them could generate novel chromatin states, not found in normal cells. The germline-specific transcription factor BORIS/CTCFL, a paralog of chromatin architecture protein CTCF, is often erroneously activated in cancers and rewires the epigenome for the germline-like transcription program. Another common feature of malignancies is the changed expression and epigenetic states of genomic repeats, which could alter the transcription of neighboring genes and cause somatic mutations upon transposition. The role of BORIS in transposable elements and other repeats has never been assessed.ResultsThe investigation of BORIS and CTCF binding to DNA repeats in the K562 cancer cells dependent on BORIS for self-renewal by ChIP-chip and ChIP-seq revealed three classes of occupancy by these proteins: elements cohabited by BORIS and CTCF, CTCF-only bound, or BORIS-only bound. The CTCF-only enrichment is characteristic for evolutionary old and inactive repeat classes, while BORIS and CTCF co-binding predominately occurs at uncharacterized tandem repeats. These repeats form staggered cluster binding sites, which are a prerequisite for CTCF and BORIS co-binding. At the same time, BORIS preferentially occupies a specific subset of the evolutionary young, transcribed, and mobile genomic repeat family, SVA. Unlike CTCF, BORIS prominently binds to the VNTR region of the SVA repeats in vivo. This suggests a role of BORIS in SVA expression regulation. RNA-seq analysis indicates that BORIS largely serves as a repressor of SVA expression, alongside DNA and histone methylation, with the exception of promoter capture by SVA.ConclusionsThus, BORIS directly binds to, and regulates SVA repeats, which are essentially movable CpG islands, via clusters of BORIS binding sites. This finding uncovers a new function of the global germline-specific transcriptional regulator BORIS in regulating and repressing the newest class of transposable elements that are actively transposed in human genome when activated. This function of BORIS in cancer cells is likely a reflection of its roles in the germline.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13072-016-0084-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
A common aberration in cancer is the activation of germline-specific proteins
BORIS expression in K562 forms a specific pattern of repeat binding We have previously shown that tandem repeats (TRs) in a human cancer cell line may serve as foci for multiple DNA damage events induced upon the resolution of mitotic chromosome bridges [65]
As a result of this study, by employing chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-chip and ChIP-seq approaches, we characterized CTCF and BORIS binding patterns of genomic repeat binding upon aberrant BORIS expression in the K562 cancer cell line, which is dependent on BORIS for proliferation
Summary
A common aberration in cancer is the activation of germline-specific proteins. The DNA-binding proteins among them could generate novel chromatin states, not found in normal cells. The germline-specific transcription factor BORIS/CTCFL, a paralog of chromatin architecture protein CTCF, is often erroneously activated in cancers and rewires the epigenome for the germline-like transcription program. Another common feature of malignancies is the changed expression and epigenetic states of genomic repeats, which could alter the transcription of neighboring genes and cause somatic mutations upon transposition. The effect of repeated DNA in the origins and progression of cancer and tumor cell physiology could be two-pronged: the induced change of expression in neighboring or targeted genes [22,23,24] and the structural destabilization of the epigenetic landscape of chromosomes [2, 25]. Some elements were shown to act as bona fide enhancers [26]
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