The Role of Histone Demethylase KDM4B in Myc Signaling in Neuroblastoma
Author(s) -
Jun J. Yang,
Alaa Altahan,
Dongli Hu,
Yingdi Wang,
Pei-Hsin Cheng,
Christopher L. Morton,
Chunxu Qu,
Amit C. Nathwani,
Jason M. Shohet,
Theodore Fotsis,
Jan Köster,
Rogier Versteeg,
Hitoshi Okada,
Adrian L. Harris,
Andrew M. Davidoff
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
jnci journal of the national cancer institute
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.797
H-Index - 356
eISSN - 1460-2105
pISSN - 0027-8874
DOI - 10.1093/jnci/djv080
Subject(s) - demethylase , gene knockdown , biology , chromatin immunoprecipitation , histone , neuroblastoma , epigenetics , cancer research , small hairpin rna , gene expression , rna interference , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , cell culture , genetics , rna , promoter
Background: Epigenetic alterations, such as histone methylation, modulate Myc signaling, a pathway central to oncogenesis. We investigated the role of the histone demethylase KDM4B in N-Myc-mediated neuroblastoma pathogenesis. Methods: Spearman correlation was performed to correlate MYCN and KDM4B expression. RNA interference, microarray analysis, gene set enrichment analysis, and real-time polymerase chain reaction were used to define the functions of KDM4B. Immunoprecipitation and immunofluorescence were used to assess protein-protein interactions between N-Myc and KDM4B. Chromatin immunoprecipitation was used to assess the binding of Myc targets. Constitutive and inducible lentiviral-mediated KDM4B knockdown with shRNA was used to assess the effects on tumor growth. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to assess the prognostic value of KDM4B expression. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: KDM4B and MYCN expression were found to be statistically significantly correlated in a variety of cancers, including neuroblastoma (R = 0.396, P <.001). Functional studies demonstrated that KDM4B regulates the Myc pathway. N-Myc was found to physically interact with and recruit KDM4B. KDM4B was found to regulate neuroblastoma cell proliferation and differentiation in vitro and xenograft growth in vivo (5 mice/group, two-tailed t test, P <= 0.001). Finally, together with MYCN amplification, KDM4B was found to stratify a subgroup of poor-prognosis patients (122 case patients, P <.001). Conclusions: Our findings provide insight into the epigenetic regulation of Myc via histone demethylation and proof-of-concept for inhibition of histone demethylases to target Myc signaling in cancers such as neuroblastom
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