Aberrant activation of Wingless-type (Wnt)/b-catenin signaling is widespread in human cervical cancer. However, the underlying mechanisms of Wnt activation and the therapeutic potential of Wnt inhibition remain largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the Wnt inhibitory factor 1 (WIF1), a secreted Wnt antagonist, is downregulated in all human primary cervical tumors and cell lines analyzed. Our data reveal that WIF1 downregulation occurs due to promoter hypermethylation and is an early event in cervical oncogenesis. WIF1 re-expression upon 5-aza-2 0 -deoxycytidine treatment or WIF1 gene transfer induces significant apoptosis and G 2 /M arrest, and inhibits cervical cancer cell proliferation in vitro. Consistent with this, treatment of established mice tumor xenografts with peritumoral WIF1 gene transfer results in a significant inhibition of cancer growth and invasion. WIF1 treatment causes a significant decrease in intracellular WNT1 and TCF-4 proteins revealing novel Wnt-regulatory mechanisms. Thus, WIF1 causes a major cellular re-distribution of b-catenin and a significant inhibition of the Wnt/b-catenin pathway in tumor cells, as documented by a remarkable reversion in the expression of Wnt/b-catenin transcriptional target genes (E-cadherin, c-Myc, cyclin D1, CD44 and VEGF). Consequently, multiple critical events in tumor progression and metastasis such as cell proliferation, angiogenesis and invasion were inhibited by WIF1. In addition, WIF1 modulated the expression of specific anti-apoptotic and apoptotic proteins, thereby inducing significant apoptosis in vivo. Our findings demonstrate for the first time that WIF1 downregulation by epigenetic gene silencing is an important mechanism of Wnt activation in cervical oncogenesis. Of major clinical relevance, we show that peritumoral WIF1 gene transfer reduces not only cancer growth but also invasion in well-established tumors. Therefore, our data provide novel mechanistic insights into the role of WIF1 in cervical cancer progression, and the important preclinical validation of WIF1 as a potent drug target in cervical cancer treatment.
Objectives
Altered signaling in B-cells is a predominant feature of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The genes BANK1 and BLK were recently described as associated with SLE. BANK1 codes for a B-cell-specific cytoplasmic protein involved in B-cell receptor signaling and BLK codes for an Src tyrosine kinase with important roles in B-cell development. To characterize the role of BANK1 and BLK in SLE, we performed a genetic interaction analysis hypothesizing that genetic interactions could reveal functional pathways relevant to disease pathogenesis.
Methods
We Used the method GPAT16 to analyze the gene-gene interactions of BANK1 and BLK. Confocal microscopy was used to investigate co-localization, and immunoprecipitation was used to verify the physical interaction of BANK1 and BLK.
Results
Epistatic interactions between BANK1 and BLK polymorphisms associated with SLE were observed in a discovery set of 279 patients and 515 controls from Northern Europe. A meta-analysis with 4399 European individuals confirmed the genetic interactions between BANK1 and BLK.
As BANK1 was identified as a binding partner of the Src tyrosine kinase LYN, we tested the possibility that BANK1 and BLK could also show a protein-protein interaction. We demonstrated co-immunoprecipitation and co-localization of BLK and BANK1. In a Daudi cell line and primary naïve B-cells the endogenous binding was enhanced upon B-cell receptor stimulation using anti-IgM antibodies.
Conclusions
Here, we show a genetic interaction between BANK1 and BLK, and demonstrate that these molecules interact physically. Our results have important consequences for the understanding of SLE and other autoimmune diseases and identify a potential new signaling pathway.
Common chromosomal fragile sites are unstable genomic loci susceptible to breakage, rearrangement, and are highly recombinogenic. Frequent alterations at these loci in tumor cells led to the hypothesis that they may contribute to cancer development. The two most common chromosomal fragile sites FRA16D and FRA3B which harbor WWOX and FHIT genes, respectively, are frequently altered in human cancers. Here we report that environmental carcinogens, ultraviolet (UV) light, and Benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide (BPDE), significantly downregulate expression of both genes. On the other hand, we observe that ionizing radiation (IR) does not affect expression of these genes, suggesting that the effect of repression exerted by UV and BPDE is not just a consequence of DNA damage but may be a result of different signaling pathways triggered by specific DNA lesions. Such downregulation correlates with an induction of an S-phase delay in the cell cycle. Treatment of UV-irradiated cells with caffeine abrogates the Sphase delay while concomitantly overcoming the repression phenomenon. This suggests the involvement of unique cell cycle checkpoint mechanisms in the observed repression. Therefore, it is hypothesized that protracted downregulation of the putative tumor suppressor genes WWOX and FHIT by environmental carcinogens may constitute an additional mechanism of relevance in the initiation of tumorigenesis.
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