| Literature DB >> 30176939 |
Holly Holliday1,2, Laura A Baker1,2, Simon R Junankar1,2, Susan J Clark2,3, Alexander Swarbrick4,5.
Abstract
Differentiation of stem cells into highly specialised cells requires gene expression changes brought about by remodelling of the chromatin architecture. During this lineage-commitment process, the majority of DNA needs to be packaged into inactive heterochromatin, allowing only a subset of regulatory elements to remain open and functionally required genes to be expressed. Epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation, post-translational modifications to histone tails, and nucleosome positioning all potentially contribute to the changes in higher order chromatin structure during differentiation. The mammary gland is a particularly useful model to study these complex epigenetic processes since the majority of its development is postnatal, the gland is easily accessible, and development occurs in a highly reproducible manner. Inappropriate epigenetic remodelling can also drive tumourigenesis; thus, insights into epigenetic remodelling during mammary gland development advance our understanding of breast cancer aetiology. We review the current literature surrounding DNA methylation and histone modifications in the developing mammary gland and its implications for breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Chromatin; Differentiation; Epigenetics; Epithelial; Histone; Mammary development; Methylation; Stem cell
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30176939 PMCID: PMC6122685 DOI: 10.1186/s13058-018-1031-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Fig. 1Model for the epigenetic regulation of lineage commitment within the mammary gland epithelium. Mammary stem cells (MaSC) located in the basal compartment can give rise to both the myoepithelial and luminal/alveolar lineages. Bipotent MaSCs may only be present during embryonic development and when basal stem cells are taken out of their physiological context (for example, upon dissociation and transplantation or culture). Epigenetic modifiers that have been shown to be involved in cell fate decisions are shown. Cells within the basal compartment (including stem, progenitor, and differentiated myoepithelial cells) have an epigenetic landscape that allows basal identity genes to be turned on and luminal identity genes to be turned off. Luminal progenitor cells have intermediate epigenetic features between basal and mature luminal cells. Mature luminal cells have repressive epigenetic features in basal and luminal progenitor identity genes and active epigenetic features in mature luminal identity genes. Red = repressed, orange = poised, green = active chromatin modifications. Open circles represent unmethylated promoter DNA; closed circles represent methylated promoter DNA
Fig. 2Epigenetic regulation of chromatin structure. The majority of DNA is packaged into inactive heterochromatin which is marked by repressive histone marks H3K27Me3, H3K9Me3, H2AK119Ub, and methylated CpG islands (closed circles) in gene promoters. Regions of open chromatin allow for activation of gene transcription and are marked by active histone marks H3K4Me3 and general histone acetylation as well as unmethylated CpG islands (open circles) in gene promoters and methylation of gene bodies. Promoter-enhancer looping (not shown) is another layer of epigenetic regulation of gene expression
Summary of epigenetic modulating proteins with known roles in mammary gland development
| Protein complex or family | Members | Modification | Activating/repressive | Role in MG development | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA methyltransferase | DNMT1, DNMT3a, DNMT3b | DNA methylation | Repressive at promoters, activating in gene bodies | DNMT1 maintains stem/progenitor cells | [ | |
| Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) | SUZ2, EED, RBBP4 or RBBP7 and EZH2 or EZH1 | H3K27 trimethylation | Repressive | EZH2 maintains stem/progenitor cells, restricts mature luminal differentiation, and promotes alveolar differentiation. | [ | |
| Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) | PCGF | BMI1 or MEL18 | H2AK119 mono-ubiquitylation | Repressive | BMI1 maintains stem/progenitor cells and restricts alveolar differentiation | [ |
| CBX | CBX2, CBX4, CBX6, CBX7, or CBX8 | |||||
| PHC | PHC1, PHC2, or PHC3 | |||||
| SCML | SCMH1 or SCML2 | |||||
| RING | RING2 or RING1 | |||||
| Lysine demethylase (KDM) proteins | JARID1B/KDM5B/PLU-1 | H3K4Me3 demethylation | Repressive and activating | GATA3 cofactor, promotes luminal differentiation | [ | |
| JMJD2B/KDM4B | H3K9Me3 demethylation | Activating | ERα cofactor, promotes luminal differentiation | [ | ||
| KDM6A/UTX | H3K27Me3 demethylation | Activating | Luminal transcription factor co-factor, promotes luminal differentiation | [ | ||
| Plant homeodomain (PHD)-containing proteins | Pygo2 | Binds to H3K4Me3 | Not applicable | β-catenin co-factor, maintains stem/progenitor cells by restricting Notch-mediated luminal differentiation | [ | |
| Bromodomain and extra-terminal domain (BET) proteins | BRD4 | Binds to acetylated lysines on histones | Activating | FOXO1 cofactor, maintains basal epithelial phenotype | [ | |