Methylation adjacent to negatively regulating AP-1 site reactivates TrkA gene expression during cancer progression.

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Citation

Fujimoto M, Kitazawa R, Maeda S, Kitazawa S

Methylation adjacent to negatively regulating AP-1 site reactivates TrkA gene expression during cancer progression.

Oncogene. 2005 Jul 28;24(32):5108-18.

PubMed ID
15870692 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Nerve growth factor and its high-affinity receptor TrkA are thought to be involved in the progression of various cancers. This study investigated the mechanism that regulates aberrant or increased TrkA expression in various cancer cell lines and in the course of pancreatic cancer progression. We found that the negative cis-acting AP-1-like sequence TGAGCGA was located in the 5'-untranslated region of the TrkA gene. Sodium bisulfite mapping revealed that steady-state TrkA expression correlated positively with the accumulation of methylated CpG around the AP-1-like site. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay showed that the AP-1-like site was bound mainly by c-Jun homodimers; the binding was directly blocked by Sss I methylase-induced methylation or by an excess of oligonucleotides containing consensus AP-1 sequences. Consequently, activation of TrkA gene expression by methylation was considered to be caused by the direct interference of c-Jun binding to the negatively regulating AP-1-like site. Furthermore, the accumulation of methylated CpG around the AP-1-like site was also observed with increased TrkA immunohistochemical staining in cases of advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma with extensive perineural invasion. Unlike global methylation at CpG islands that leads to gene silencing, specific methylation at non-CpG islands would play a crucial epigenetic role in the versatility and plasticity of TrkA expression during cancer progression.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
High affinity nerve growth factor receptorP04629Details