4.6 Article

Cell-specific Kaiso (ZBTB33) Regulation of Cell Cycle through Cyclin D1 and Cyclin E1

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 291, Issue 47, Pages 24538-24550

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.746370

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Funding

  1. Department of Chemistry, University of Utah
  2. American Cancer Society [RSG-14-185-01-DMC]
  3. National Institutes of Health from the NCI [P30CA042014]

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The correlation between aberrant DNA methylation with cancer promotion and progression has prompted an interest in discerning the associated regulatory mechanisms. Kaiso (ZBTB33) is a specialized transcription factor that selectively recognizes methylated CpG-containing sites as well as a sequence-specific DNA target. Increasing reports link ZBTB33 overexpression and transcriptional activities with metastatic potential and poor prognosis in cancer, although there is little mechanistic insight into how cells harness ZBTB33 transcriptional capabilities to promote and progress disease. Here we report mechanistic details for how ZBTB33 mediates cell-specific cell cycle regulation. By utilizing ZBTB33 depletion and overexpression studies, it was determined that in HeLa cells ZBTB33 directly occupies the promoters of cyclin D1 and cyclin El, inducing proliferation by promoting retinoblastoma phosphorylation and allowing for E2F transcriptional activity that accelerates G(1)- to S-phase transition. Conversely, in HEK293 cells ZBTB33 indirectly regulates cyclin E abundance resulting in reduced retinoblastoma phosphorylation, decreased E2F activity, and decelerated G(1) transition. Thus, we identified a novel mechanism by which ZBTB33 mediates the cyclin D-1/cyclin El/RB1/E2E pathway, controlling passage through the G(1) restriction point and accelerating cancer cell proliferation.

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