4.5 Article

Histone Deacetylase 10 Regulates the Cell Cycle G2/M Phase Transition via a Novel Let-7-HMGA2-Cyclin A2 Pathway

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 20, Pages 3547-3565

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.00400-15

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. Kaul Foundation

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Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibition leads to cell cycle arrest in G(1), and G(2), suggesting HDACs as therapeutic targets for cancer and diseases linked to abnormal cell growth and proliferation. Many HDACs are transcriptional repressors. Some may alter cell cycle progression by deacetylating histones and repressing transcription of key cell cycle regulatory genes. Here, we report that HDAC10 regulates the cell cycle via modulation of cydin A2 expression, and cyclin A2 overexpression rescues HDAC10 knockdown-induced G(2)/M transition arrest. HDAC10 regulates cydin A2 expression by deacetylating histones near the let-7 promoter, thereby repressing transcription. In HDAC 10 knockdown cells, let-7f and microRNA 98 (miR-98) were upregulated and the let-7 family target, HMGA2, was downregulated. HMGA2 loss resulted in enrichment of the transcriptional repressor E4F at the cydin A2 promoter. These findings support a role for HDACs in cell cycle regulation, reveal a novel mechanism of HDAC10 action, and extend the potential of HDACs as targets in diseases of cell cycle dysregulation.

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