| Literature DB >> 27231175 |
Sai Huang1, Meng-Meng Jiang2, Guo-Feng Chen1, Kun Qian1, Hong-Hao Gao1, Wei Guan1, Jin-Long Shi1, An-Qi Liu1, Jing Liu1, Bian-Hong Wang1, Yong-Hui Li1, Li Yu1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The acute myeloid leukemia 1 (AML1)-eight-twenty-one (ETO) fusion protein generated by the t(8;21)(q22;q22) translocation is considered to display a crucial role in leukemogenesis in AML. By focusing on the anti-leukemia effects of eyes absent 4 (EYA4) gene on AML cells, we investigated the biologic and molecular mechanism associated with AML1-ETO expressed in t(8;21) AML.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27231175 PMCID: PMC4894048 DOI: 10.4103/0366-6999.182838
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin Med J (Engl) ISSN: 0366-6999 Impact factor: 2.628
Figure 1EYA4 levels in leukemia and cell lines. (a) The structure of EYA family proteins and EYA domain. The methylation status of 38 genes in mononucleated cells isolated from four AML1/ETO+ patients, four AML1/ETO− patients and two healthy donors using 450 K Infinium Methylation BeadChIP of Illumina (b; EYA4 is showed in a red circle) and the relative methylation level of EYA4 in these samples (c). (d) Relative qRT-PCR quantification of EYA4 expression level in mononucleated cells isolated from 22 AML1/ETO+ patients, 24 AML1/ETO− patients and five healthy donors. AML1/ETO+ cases had lower EYA4 levels. (e) Top and middle panels: Relative quantification of EYA4 levels in HL-60, Kasumi-1, SKNO-1 (wild-type, mock and siA/E) cells. The results represent mean of three independent evaluations ± standard deviation (*P < 0.05). Bottom panels: Immunoblot analysis for EYA4 and AML1/ETO with an antibody against EYA4. β-actin was used as a protein loading control. (f) Top and middle panels: Relative quantification of EYA4 levels in U937 (mock and A/E-HA) cells. The results represent mean of three independent evaluations ± standard deviation (*P < 0.05). Bottom panels: Immunoblot analysis for EYA4 and AML1/ETO with an antibody against EYA4. β-actin was used as a protein loading control. The expression of AML1/ETO in U937 cells was increased by Zn2+ treatment (100 μmol/L for 16 h). EYA: Eyes absent; AML: Acute myeloid leukemia; ETO: Eight-twenty-one; GAPDH: Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; qRT-PCR: Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; ChIP: Chromatin immunoprecipitation.
Sequences of primers used in this study
| Names | Sequence from 5’ to 3’ | Product size (nt) |
|---|---|---|
| RT-PCR and qRT-PCR | ||
| RT-EYA4 | ||
| Sense | TCGTTGTGTTTGCATGGTTT | 190 |
| Antisense | CCTGACTCCAGGATCCACAT | |
| GAPDH | ||
| Sense | TTGATTTTGGAGGGATCTCG | 238 |
| Antisense | GAGTCAACGGATTTGGTCGT | |
| EYA4 transactivation assays | ||
| EYA4-P1 | ||
| Sense | CGGGGTACCTTCGCAGCACAGCCTATCCCCAGA | 759 |
| EYA4-P2 | ||
| Sense | CGGGGTACCACGGAGATTACGGCGGCGCCACC | 365 |
| EYA4-M | ||
| Sense | TCTCCTCCCTTCGCGAAAGTGGAAA | 608 |
| Antisense for EYA4-P1, P2, M | CCCAAGCTTACCCCGGCTTTTCCCGCAGCTCT | |
| ChIP assay | ||
| Unrelated-EYA4-ChIP | ||
| Sense | CCAGAATGTGCTCTCAACCA | 172 |
| Antisense | CAGTCGTTGCTGCTCTCATC | |
| Related-EYA4-ChIP | ||
| Sense | ACGGATGCCTATACCTGCAC | 217 |
| Antisense | CTTACCCCAAGGGAGGAGAC | |
| GAPDH | ||
| Sense | GAGTCAACGGATTTGGTCGT | 238 |
| Antisense | TTGATTTTGGAGGGATCTCG | |
| Bisulfite modification and genomic sequencing | ||
| EYA4-BSP | ||
| Sense | GTAGTATTGGAAGGGGTTTAGG | 337 |
| Antisense | ACTACAACCTCCAAACTAAA | |
| Full-length EYA4 cDNA for transfection | ||
| EYA4 | ||
| Sense | CGGGGTACCATGGAAGACTCCCAGGATTTAAATGAACAATC | 1761 |
| Antisense | CCGCTCGAGTTACAAATACTCTAATTCCAGTGCTTGGTGGA |
RT-PCR: Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; qRT-PCR: Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; EYA4: Eyes absent 4; GAPDH: Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; ChIP: Chromatin immunoprecipitation.
Figure 2AML1/ETO/HDACs/DNMTs complex acting on the AML1 DNA-binding site presents on the upstream sequence of EYA4 gene and alters its epigenetic status. (a) Schematic diagrams of the AML1-binding site and the CpG islands along the EYA4 gene. The numbers are the nucleotides relative to EYA4 (−1). The vertical arrow indicates the AML1 DNA-binding site. The vertical lines indicate CpG dinucleotides, and the horizontal bar below the CpG sites shows the region analyzed by the bisulfite sequencing. (b) Human 293T cells were cotransfected transiently for 48 h with luciferase reporter containing the wild-type sequence of the EYA4 regulatory regions or its counterpart mutants, and with increasing amounts (10, 50 and 100 ng) of pcDNA3.0 with or without AML1/ETO cDNA. (c) Chromatin was immunoprecipitated by the use of the indicated antibodies. The horizontal lines indicate the location of the primers that are used in the ChIP assay. To evaluate the specificity of protein binding, qRT-PCR was performed using “Target” primers designed for the amplification of DNA sequences surrounding the proximal AML1-binding site, and “Off-target” primers designed for the amplification of a distal region on EYA4 gene without containing the predicted AML1 binding site. Input shows the amplification from the sonicated chromatin. The amplification of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was used as a control for nonspecific precipitated sequences. *P < 0.05. (d) Genomic bisulfite sequencing was performed to find out the methylation status of the DNA sequences surrounding the AML1-binding site (−523 bp) in EYA4 from the indicated leukemic blasts. Each row of circles represents the sequence of a single clone. Black and empty circles represent methylated and unmethylated CpG dinucleotides, respectively. For each sample, the specific percentages of global methylation level of these regions on EYA4 gene are indicated. AML: Acute myeloid leukemia; ETO: Eight-twenty-one; HDAC: Histone deacetylase; DNMT: DNA methyltransferases; EYA: Eyes absent; qRT-PCR: Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; ChIP: Chromatin immunoprecipitation.
Figure 3EYA4 inhibits cell proliferation, induces apoptosis and suppresses colony formation in AML1/ETO+ cell lines. (a) Growth curve of Kasumi-1 cells transfected with pcDNA3.0-EYA4 and pcDNA3.0. The number of viable cells was assessed by the CCK-8 assay. (b) Growth curve of HL-60 cells transfected with EYA4-siRNA and siLuc. The number of viable cells was assessed by the CCK-8 assay. (c) Flow cytometry analysis of apoptosis in Kasumi-1 and SKNO-1 cells at 48 h after transfected with 1 μg of pcDNA3.0 and pcDNA-EYA4. (d) Flow cytometry analysis of apoptosis in HL-60 and SKNO-1-siA/E cells at 48 h after transfected with 750 μg of EYA4-siRNA and siLuc. (e) Colony formation assay of Kasumi-1 cells at 48 h after transfected with 1 μg of pcDNA3.0 and pcDNA-EYA4 (scale bar = 1 mm). (f) Colony formation assay of HL-60 and SKNO-1-siA/E cells at 48 h after transfected with 750 μg of EYA4-siRNA and siLuc (scale bar = 1 mm). AML: Acute myeloid leukemia; ETO: Eight-twenty-one; EYA: Eyes absent; CCK-8: Cell Counting Kit-8; siLuc: Small interfering luciferase; siRNA: Small interfering RNA.
Figure 4Schematic model for epigenetic silencing of EYA4 by AML1/ETO and its role in t(8;21) AML. AML: Acute myeloid leukemia; ETO: Eight-twenty-one; EYA: Eyes absent; DNMTs: DNA methyltransferases; HDAC: Histone deacetylase.