JUNB governs a feed-forward network of TGFβ signaling that aggravates breast cancer invasion

Anders Sundqvist(Uppsala University), Masato Morikawa(Uppsala University), Jiang Ren(Leiden University Medical Center), Eleftheria Vasilaki(Uppsala University), Natsumi Kawasaki(The University of Tokyo), Mai Kobayashi(The University of Tokyo), Daizo Koinuma(Uppsala University), Hiroyuki Aburatani(The University of Tokyo), Kohei Miyazono(Uppsala University), Carl‐Henrik Heldin(Uppsala University), Hans van Dam(Uppsala University), Peter ten Dijke(Uppsala University)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 19, 2017
Cited by 154Open Access
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Abstract

It is well established that transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) switches its function from being a tumor suppressor to a tumor promoter during the course of tumorigenesis, which involves both cell-intrinsic and environment-mediated mechanisms. We are interested in breast cancer cells, in which SMAD mutations are rare and interactions between SMAD and other transcription factors define pro-oncogenic events. Here, we have performed chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-sequencing analyses which indicate that the genome-wide landscape of SMAD2/3 binding is altered after prolonged TGFβ stimulation. De novo motif analyses of the SMAD2/3 binding regions predict enrichment of binding motifs for activator protein (AP)1 in addition to SMAD motifs. TGFβ-induced expression of the AP1 component JUNB was required for expression of many late invasion-mediating genes, creating a feed-forward regulatory network. Moreover, we found that several components in the WNT pathway were enriched among the late TGFβ-target genes, including the invasion-inducing WNT7 proteins. Consistently, overexpression of WNT7A or WNT7B enhanced and potentiated TGFβ-induced breast cancer cell invasion, while inhibition of the WNT pathway reduced this process. Our study thereby helps to explain how accumulation of pro-oncogenic stimuli switches and stabilizes TGFβ-induced cellular phenotypes of epithelial cells.


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