4.7 Review

The emerging role of mediator complex subunit 12 in tumorigenesis and response to chemotherapeutics

Journal

CANCER
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages 939-948

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.32672

Keywords

drug resistance; Mediator; mediator complex subunit 12 (MED12); methylation; mutation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81502603]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LGF18H160016]
  3. Medicine and Health Science Fund of Zhejiang Province [2018RC021]
  4. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA213293, R01 CA236356]

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Transcriptional dysregulation induced by disease-defining genetic alterations of proteins in transcriptional machinery is a key feature of cancers. Mediator complex subunit 12 (MED12) is the central architectural subunit in the kinase module of Mediator, a large transcriptional regulatory complex that controls essential steps of transcription. Emerging evidence links deregulated MED12 to human cancers. MED12 is frequently mutated in benign tumors and cancers. Although the missense mutations of MED12 in benign tumors disrupt the kinase activity of Mediator, MED12 mutations in cancers could eliminate the interaction between Mediator complex and RNA polymerase II, leading to severe transcriptional misregulation. Aberrant expression of MED12 is associated with the prognosis of various types of human cancers. Loss of MED12 function has been associated with the development of resistance to chemotherapeutics. Moreover, MED12 is modified by posttranscriptional regulations. Arginine methylation of MED12 has been shown to regulate MED12-mediated transcriptional regulation and response to chemotherapeutics in human cancer cell lines. In this mini-review, the authors provide an overview of the roles of MED12 in the development of benign and malignant tumors as well as its roles in chemoresistance. The studies of MED12 exemplify that aberrant transcriptional programming is a therapeutic vulnerability for certain types of cancer.

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