| Literature DB >> 22168535 |
Rosalia de Necochea-Campion1, Anahit Ghochikyan, Steven F Josephs, Shelly Zacharias, Erik Woods, Feridoun Karimi-Busheri, Doru T Alexandrescu, Chien-Shing Chen, Michael G Agadjanyan, Ewa Carrier.
Abstract
BORIS, or CTCFL, the so called Brother of the Regulator of Imprinted Sites because of the extensive homology in the central DNA binding region of the protein to the related regulator, CTCF, is expressed in early gametogenesis and in multiple cancers but not in differentiated somatic cells. Thus it is a member of the cancer testes antigen group (CTAs). Since BORIS and CTCF target common DNA binding sites, these proteins function on two levels, the first level is their regulation via the methylation context of the DNA target site and the second level is their distinct and different epigenetic associations due to differences in the non-homologous termini of the proteins. The regulation on both of these levels is extensive and complex and the sphere of influence of each of these proteins is associated with vastly different cellular signaling processes. On the level of gene expression, BORIS has three known promoters and multiple spliced mRNAs which adds another level of complexity to this intriguing regulator. BORIS expression is observed in the majority of cancer tissues and cell lines analyzed up to today. The expression profile and essential role of BORIS in cancer make this molecule very attractive target for cancer immunotherapy. This review summarizes what is known about BORIS regarding its expression, structure, and function and then presents some theoretical considerations with respect to its genome wide influence and its potential for use as a vaccine for cancer immunotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22168535 PMCID: PMC3264669 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-9-213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Variability in the frequency of BORIS expression detected in cancer (NT = not tested)
| Type of Cancer | Cell Line Expression | Primary Tumor Sample | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | 8%-100% | 71%*-92%* | [ |
| Melanoma | 90%-100% | 27%* | [ |
| Colon | 75-100% | 80%* | [ |
| Prostate | 50%-60% | 90%* | [ |
| Ovarian | 40%-100% | NT | [ |
| Lung | 60%-100% | NT | [ |
| Leukemia | 100% | NT | [ |
| Bladder | 27% | NT | [ |
| Uterine | 77% | NT | [ |
| Endometrial | 77% | NT | [ |
| Osteosarcomas | NT | 38%* | [ |
| Squamous cell carcinomas | NT | 81%* | [ |
Figure 1Known human interacting protein partners of BORIS (yellow) and CTCF (blue). Squares indicate the proteins observed to interact with both BORIS and CTCF. van de Nobelen et al., 2010 identified UBF as a common interacting partner for both BORIS and CTCF [16]. All other proteins shown to associate with BORIS were identified by Nguyen et al., 2008 and isolated using yeast 2-hybrid screening techniques with N-terminus segments of the BORIS protein as bait [25]. Proteins shown to interact with CTCF were all discussed in an excellent review published by Ohlsson et al., 2010 [27].
Figure 2Shown are the proteins known to bind to the N-terminus region of the BORIS which have the potential to interact with methyltransferases with catalyze H3K4 methylations. Solid lines represent documented protein complexes [25], and dashed lines represent the potential for additionally formed protein complexes since it is unknown if these interactions [35] also take place in the presence of BORIS.
Figure 3BORIS characteristics that make it an attractive target antigen for cancer treatment. Numbers indicate numeric references associated with each category.