| Literature DB >> 28359147 |
Je Yeong Ko1, Sumin Oh2, Kyung Hyun Yoo3.
Abstract
Tissue-specific transcription is critical for normal development, and abnormalities causing undesirable gene expression may lead to diseases such as cancer. Such highly organized transcription is controlled by enhancers with specific DNA sequences recognized by transcription factors. Enhancers are associated with chromatin modifications that are distinct epigenetic features in a tissue-specific manner. Recently, super-enhancers comprising enhancer clusters co-occupied by lineage-specific factors have been identified in diverse cell types such as adipocytes, hair follicle stem cells, and mammary epithelial cells. In addition, noncoding RNAs, named eRNAs, are synthesized at super-enhancer regions before their target genes are transcribed. Many functional studies revealed that super-enhancers and eRNAs are essential for the regulation of tissue-specific gene expression. In this review, we summarize recent findings concerning enhancer function in tissue-specific gene regulation and cancer development.Entities:
Keywords: cell-type specific gene regulation; eRNA; enhancer; epigenetic regulation; super-enhancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28359147 PMCID: PMC5386954 DOI: 10.14348/molcells.2017.0033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cells ISSN: 1016-8478 Impact factor: 5.034
Fig. 1Overview of enhancer features controlling tissue-specific gene expression
Histone modifications to identify active enhancers marked with high H3K27ac, high H3K4me1, and low/no H3K4me3. Super-enhancers are characterized by multiple enhancers co-occupied with lineage-specific transcription factors within tens of kilobases covered with extended H3K27ac. eRNAs are bi-directionally transcribed at enhancers and involved in promoter-enhancer interactions by binding with cohesin.
Super-enhancers and enhancer RNAs in cancer
| Cancer type | Sample | Super-enhancer associated genes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colorectal cancer | HCT-116 | ||
| Small cell lung cancer | NCI-H69 | ||
| GLC16 | |||
| NCI-H82 | |||
| T cell acute lylmphoblastic leukemia | Jurkat | ||
| Acute myeloid leukemia | MOLM-14 | ||
|
| |||
| Cancer type | Sample | Enhancer RNAs | References |
|
| |||
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | (E2-induced eRNAs) | |
| (p53-regulated eRNAs) | |||
| Castration-resistant prostate cancer | LNCaP, C4-2 | (AR-regulated eRNAs) | |
| (enzalutamide resistance) | |||
Fig. 2Cancer-specific transcription regulated by super-enhancers and enhancer RNA
(A) Enrichment of super-enhancer associated with the MYC gene family in colorectal cancer and small cell lung cancer cell lines (B) TAL1 super-enhancer in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell lines (C) Stabilization of E2/ERα/eRNA-induced enhancer-promoter looping in breast cancer cell lines.
Therapeutic effect targeted by super-enhancers or eRNAs
| Cancer type | Target | inhibitor | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ovarian cancer | ALDH | BET inhibitor (JQ1) | Reduction of tumor size under combination treatment of JQ1 and cisplatin | |
| Oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma | RUNX1, YAP1, DNAJB1, STEBF2, PAK4 | CDK7 inhibitor (THZ1) | Reduction of OSCC tumor weight and distal OSCC cell metastasis |