Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2817462 Gene 2013 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The induction of the major histocompatibility (MHC), antigen-presenting class II molecules by interferon-gamma, in solid tumor cells, requires the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein (Rb). In the absence of Rb, a repressosome blocks the access of positive-acting, promoter binding proteins to the MHC class II promoter. However, a complete molecular linkage between Rb expression and the disassembly of the MHC class II repressosome has been lacking. By treating A549 lung carcinoma cells with a novel small molecule that prevents phosphorylation-mediated, Rb inactivation, we demonstrate that Rb represses the synthesis of an MHC class II repressosome component, YY1. The reduction in YY1 synthesis correlates with the advent of MHC class II inducibility; with loss of YY1 binding to the promoter of the HLA–DRA gene, the canonical human MHC class II gene; and with increased Rb binding to the YY1 promoter. These results support the concept that the Rb gene regulatory network (GRN) subcircuit that regulates cell proliferation is linked to a GRN subcircuit regulating a tumor cell immune function.

► Linkage of two cancer related, gene regulatory network (closed) subcircuits ► Small molecule activation of a subcircuit member regulating a different subcircuit ► Small molecule paradigm for enhancing tumor immunity against Rb-inactive tumors

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Genetics
Authors
, , , , ,