Cargando…

DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells

Epigenetic inactivation of tumor-suppressor and other regulatory genes plays a critical role in carcinogenesis. Transcriptional silencing is often maintained by DNA methyl transferase (DNMT)-mediated hypermethylation of CpG islands in promoter DNA. Nucleoside analogs including azacytidine and decita...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hossain, M. Zulfiquer, Healey, Megan A., Lee, Calvin, Poh, Weijie, Yerram, Sashidhar R., Patel, Kalpesh, Azad, Nilofer S., Herman, James G., Kern, Scott E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3712575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23593653
_version_ 1782277084952920064
author Hossain, M. Zulfiquer
Healey, Megan A.
Lee, Calvin
Poh, Weijie
Yerram, Sashidhar R.
Patel, Kalpesh
Azad, Nilofer S.
Herman, James G.
Kern, Scott E.
author_facet Hossain, M. Zulfiquer
Healey, Megan A.
Lee, Calvin
Poh, Weijie
Yerram, Sashidhar R.
Patel, Kalpesh
Azad, Nilofer S.
Herman, James G.
Kern, Scott E.
author_sort Hossain, M. Zulfiquer
collection PubMed
description Epigenetic inactivation of tumor-suppressor and other regulatory genes plays a critical role in carcinogenesis. Transcriptional silencing is often maintained by DNA methyl transferase (DNMT)-mediated hypermethylation of CpG islands in promoter DNA. Nucleoside analogs including azacytidine and decitabine have been used to inhibit DNMT and re-activate genes, and are clinically used. Their shortcomings include a short half-life and a slow onset of action due to required nucleotide incorporation during DNA replication, which may limit clinical utility. It might be useful to begin to identify lead compounds having novel properties, specifically distinct and fast-acting gene desilencing. We previously identified chemicals augmenting gene expression in multiple reporter systems. We now report that a subset of these compounds that includes quinacrine re-expresses epigenetically silenced genes implicated in carcinogenesis. p16, TFPI2, the cadherins E-cadherin and CDH13, and the secreted frizzle-related proteins (SFRPs) SFRP1 and SFRP5 were desilenced in cancer cell lines. These lead compounds were fast-acting: re-expression occurred by 12-24 hours. Reactivation of silenced genes was accompanied by depletion of DNMT1 at the promoters of activated genes and demethylation of DNA. A model compound, 5175328, induced changes more rapidly than decitabine. These gene desilencing agents belonged to a class of acridine compounds, intercalated into DNA, and inhibited DNMT1 activity in vitro. Although to define the mechanism would be outside the scope of this initial report, this class may re-activate silenced genes in part by intercalating into DNA and subsequently inhibiting full DNMT1 activity. Rapid mechanisms for chemical desilencing of methylated genes therefore exist.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3712575
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Impact Journals LLC
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37125752013-07-22 DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells Hossain, M. Zulfiquer Healey, Megan A. Lee, Calvin Poh, Weijie Yerram, Sashidhar R. Patel, Kalpesh Azad, Nilofer S. Herman, James G. Kern, Scott E. Oncotarget Research Paper Epigenetic inactivation of tumor-suppressor and other regulatory genes plays a critical role in carcinogenesis. Transcriptional silencing is often maintained by DNA methyl transferase (DNMT)-mediated hypermethylation of CpG islands in promoter DNA. Nucleoside analogs including azacytidine and decitabine have been used to inhibit DNMT and re-activate genes, and are clinically used. Their shortcomings include a short half-life and a slow onset of action due to required nucleotide incorporation during DNA replication, which may limit clinical utility. It might be useful to begin to identify lead compounds having novel properties, specifically distinct and fast-acting gene desilencing. We previously identified chemicals augmenting gene expression in multiple reporter systems. We now report that a subset of these compounds that includes quinacrine re-expresses epigenetically silenced genes implicated in carcinogenesis. p16, TFPI2, the cadherins E-cadherin and CDH13, and the secreted frizzle-related proteins (SFRPs) SFRP1 and SFRP5 were desilenced in cancer cell lines. These lead compounds were fast-acting: re-expression occurred by 12-24 hours. Reactivation of silenced genes was accompanied by depletion of DNMT1 at the promoters of activated genes and demethylation of DNA. A model compound, 5175328, induced changes more rapidly than decitabine. These gene desilencing agents belonged to a class of acridine compounds, intercalated into DNA, and inhibited DNMT1 activity in vitro. Although to define the mechanism would be outside the scope of this initial report, this class may re-activate silenced genes in part by intercalating into DNA and subsequently inhibiting full DNMT1 activity. Rapid mechanisms for chemical desilencing of methylated genes therefore exist. Impact Journals LLC 2013-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3712575/ /pubmed/23593653 Text en Copyright: © 2013 Hossain et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited
spellingShingle Research Paper
Hossain, M. Zulfiquer
Healey, Megan A.
Lee, Calvin
Poh, Weijie
Yerram, Sashidhar R.
Patel, Kalpesh
Azad, Nilofer S.
Herman, James G.
Kern, Scott E.
DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells
title DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells
title_full DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells
title_fullStr DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells
title_full_unstemmed DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells
title_short DNA-intercalators Causing Rapid Re-expression of Methylated and Silenced Genes in Cancer Cells
title_sort dna-intercalators causing rapid re-expression of methylated and silenced genes in cancer cells
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3712575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23593653
work_keys_str_mv AT hossainmzulfiquer dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT healeymegana dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT leecalvin dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT pohweijie dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT yerramsashidharr dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT patelkalpesh dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT azadnilofers dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT hermanjamesg dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells
AT kernscotte dnaintercalatorscausingrapidreexpressionofmethylatedandsilencedgenesincancercells