Context-specific role of SOX9 in NF-Y mediated gene regulation in colorectal cancer cells

Zhongcheng Shi(Texas Children's Hospital), Chi-I Chiang(Texas Children's Hospital), Paul Labhart(Active Motif (United States)), Yanling Zhao(Children's Cancer Center), Jianhua Yang(Baylor College of Medicine), Toni-Ann Mistretta(Texas Children's Hospital), Susan Henning(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Sankar N. Maity, Yuko Mori–Akiyama(Texas Children's Hospital)
Nucleic Acids Research
June 3, 2015
Cited by 70Open Access
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Abstract

Roles for SOX9 have been extensively studied in development and particular emphasis has been placed on SOX9 roles in cell lineage determination in a number of discrete tissues. Aberrant expression of SOX9 in many cancers, including colorectal cancer, suggests roles in these diseases as well and recent studies have suggested tissue- and context-specific roles of SOX9. Our genome wide approach by chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) in human colorectal cancer cells identified a number of physiological targets of SOX9, including ubiquitously expressed cell cycle regulatory genes, such as CCNB1 and CCNB2, CDK1, and TOP2A. These novel high affinity-SOX9 binding peaks precisely overlapped with binding sites for histone-fold NF-Y transcription factor. Furthermore, our data showed that SOX9 is recruited by NF-Y to these promoters of cell cycle regulatory genes and that SOX9 is critical for the full function of NF-Y in activation of the cell cycle genes. Mutagenesis analysis and in vitro binding assays provided additional evidence to show that SOX9 affinity is through NF-Y and that SOX9 DNA binding domain is not necessary for SOX9 affinity to those target genes. Collectively, our results reveal possibly a context-dependent, non-classical regulatory role for SOX9.


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