| Literature DB >> 27533081 |
Jinwoo Ahn1, Kwang Hyun Kim2, Sanghui Park3, Young-Ho Ahn4, Ha Young Kim1, Hana Yoon2, Ji Hyun Lee5, Duhee Bang1, Dong Hyeon Lee2.
Abstract
UTX is a histone demethylase gene located on the X chromosome and is a frequently mutated gene in urothelial bladder cancer (UBC). UTY is a paralog of UTX located on the Y chromosome. We performed target capture sequencing on 128 genes in 40 non-metastatic UBC patients. UTX was the most frequently mutated gene (30%, 12/40). Of the genetic alterations identified, 75% were truncating mutations. UTY copy number loss was detected in 8 male patients (22.8%, 8/35). Of the 9 male patients with UTX mutations, 6 also had copy number loss (66.7%). To evaluate the functional roles of UTX and UTY in tumor progression, we designed UTX and UTY single knockout and UTX-UTY double knockout experiments using a CRISPR/Cas9 lentiviral system, and compared the proliferative capacities of two UBC cell lines in vitro. Single UTX or UTY knockout increased cell proliferation as compared to UTX-UTY wild-type cells. UTX-UTY double knockout cells exhibited greater proliferation than single knockout cells. These findings suggest both UTX and UTY function as dose-dependent suppressors of UBC development. While UTX escapes X chromosome inactivation in females, UTY may function as a male homologue of UTX, which could compensate for dosage imbalances.Entities:
Keywords: UTX; UTY; chromatin remodeling; epigenesis; urinary bladder neoplasm
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27533081 PMCID: PMC5325361 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.11207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1A. Overall mutation profiles and patient characteristics. B. Genes with somatic mutations that had frequencies ≥ 10% and the corresponding mutation types. C. Genes with copy number variations that were detected at a frequency ≥ 10%.
Figure 2A. Pathway enrichment analysis of mutated genes. B. The locations of somatic mutations in chromatin remodeling genes that had frequencies ≥ 10%.
Figure 3Changes in proliferation between UTX/UTY single knock-out and UTX-UTY double knock-out cells (*, P < 0.01; **, P < 0.05; N, not significant)
A. MTT assays with the HT-1197 cell line. B. MTT assays with the UMUC3 cell line. C. Cell counting assays with the HT-1197 cell line. D. Cell counting assays with the UMUC3 cell line. E. BrdU incorporation assays with the HT-1197 and UMUC3 cell lines.
Figure 4Changes in expression patterns in UBC cell lines after UTY knock-out
Differentially expressed genes that exhibited the same trends (up/down-regulation) in both cell lines are shown in the heat map.