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BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling

For advanced prostate cancer (CaP), the progression of tumors to the state of chemoresistance and paucity of knowledge about the mechanism of chemoresistance are major stumbling blocks in the management of this disease. Here, we provide compelling evidence that BMI1 polycomb group protein and a stem...

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Autores principales: Siddique, Hifzur Rahman, Parray, Aijaz, Tarapore, Rohinton S., Wang, Lei, Mukhtar, Hasan, Karnes, R. Jeffery, Deng, Yibin, Konety, Badrinath R., Saleem, Mohammad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3645992/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23671559
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0060664
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author Siddique, Hifzur Rahman
Parray, Aijaz
Tarapore, Rohinton S.
Wang, Lei
Mukhtar, Hasan
Karnes, R. Jeffery
Deng, Yibin
Konety, Badrinath R.
Saleem, Mohammad
author_facet Siddique, Hifzur Rahman
Parray, Aijaz
Tarapore, Rohinton S.
Wang, Lei
Mukhtar, Hasan
Karnes, R. Jeffery
Deng, Yibin
Konety, Badrinath R.
Saleem, Mohammad
author_sort Siddique, Hifzur Rahman
collection PubMed
description For advanced prostate cancer (CaP), the progression of tumors to the state of chemoresistance and paucity of knowledge about the mechanism of chemoresistance are major stumbling blocks in the management of this disease. Here, we provide compelling evidence that BMI1 polycomb group protein and a stem cell factor plays a crucial role in determining the fate of tumors vis-à-vis chemotherapy. We show that progressive increase in the levels of BMI1 occurs during the progression of CaP disease in humans. We show that BMI1-rich tumor cells are non-responsive to chemotherapy whereas BMI1-silenced tumor cells are responsive to therapy. By employing microarray, ChIP, immunoblot and Luciferase reporter assays, we identified a unique mechanism through which BMI1 rescues tumor cells from chemotherapy. We found that BMI1 regulates (i) activity of TCF4 transcriptional factor and (ii) binding of TCF4 to the promoter region of anti-apoptotic BCL2 gene. Notably, an increased TCF4 occupancy on BCL2 gene was observed in prostatic tissues exhibiting high BMI1 levels. Using tumor cells other than CaP, we also showed that regulation of TCF4-mediated BCL2 by BMI1 is universal. It is noteworthy that forced expression of BMI1 was observed to drive normal cells to hyperproliferative mode. We show that targeting BMI1 improves the outcome of docetaxel therapy in animal models bearing chemoresistant prostatic tumors. We suggest that BMI1 could be exploited as a potential molecular target for therapeutics to treat chemoresistant tumors.
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spelling pubmed-36459922013-05-13 BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling Siddique, Hifzur Rahman Parray, Aijaz Tarapore, Rohinton S. Wang, Lei Mukhtar, Hasan Karnes, R. Jeffery Deng, Yibin Konety, Badrinath R. Saleem, Mohammad PLoS One Research Article For advanced prostate cancer (CaP), the progression of tumors to the state of chemoresistance and paucity of knowledge about the mechanism of chemoresistance are major stumbling blocks in the management of this disease. Here, we provide compelling evidence that BMI1 polycomb group protein and a stem cell factor plays a crucial role in determining the fate of tumors vis-à-vis chemotherapy. We show that progressive increase in the levels of BMI1 occurs during the progression of CaP disease in humans. We show that BMI1-rich tumor cells are non-responsive to chemotherapy whereas BMI1-silenced tumor cells are responsive to therapy. By employing microarray, ChIP, immunoblot and Luciferase reporter assays, we identified a unique mechanism through which BMI1 rescues tumor cells from chemotherapy. We found that BMI1 regulates (i) activity of TCF4 transcriptional factor and (ii) binding of TCF4 to the promoter region of anti-apoptotic BCL2 gene. Notably, an increased TCF4 occupancy on BCL2 gene was observed in prostatic tissues exhibiting high BMI1 levels. Using tumor cells other than CaP, we also showed that regulation of TCF4-mediated BCL2 by BMI1 is universal. It is noteworthy that forced expression of BMI1 was observed to drive normal cells to hyperproliferative mode. We show that targeting BMI1 improves the outcome of docetaxel therapy in animal models bearing chemoresistant prostatic tumors. We suggest that BMI1 could be exploited as a potential molecular target for therapeutics to treat chemoresistant tumors. Public Library of Science 2013-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3645992/ /pubmed/23671559 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0060664 Text en © 2013 Siddique et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Siddique, Hifzur Rahman
Parray, Aijaz
Tarapore, Rohinton S.
Wang, Lei
Mukhtar, Hasan
Karnes, R. Jeffery
Deng, Yibin
Konety, Badrinath R.
Saleem, Mohammad
BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling
title BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling
title_full BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling
title_fullStr BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling
title_full_unstemmed BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling
title_short BMI1 Polycomb Group Protein Acts as a Master Switch for Growth and Death of Tumor Cells: Regulates TCF4-Transcriptional Factor-Induced BCL2 Signaling
title_sort bmi1 polycomb group protein acts as a master switch for growth and death of tumor cells: regulates tcf4-transcriptional factor-induced bcl2 signaling
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3645992/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23671559
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0060664
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