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ZMIZ1 enhances ERα-dependent expression of E2F2 in breast cancer.

Authors :
Zhao W
Rose SF
Blake R
Godicelj A
Cullen AE
Stenning J
Beevors L
Gehrung M
Kumar S
Kishore K
Sawle A
Eldridge M
Giorgi FM
Bridge KS
Markowetz F
Holding AN
Source :
Journal of molecular endocrinology [J Mol Endocrinol] 2024 Apr 25; Vol. 73 (1). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 25 (Print Publication: 2024).
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The estrogen receptor-α (ER) drives 75% of breast cancers. On activation, the ER recruits and assembles a 1-2 MDa transcriptionally active complex. These complexes can modulate tumour growth, and understanding the roles of individual proteins within these complexes can help identify new therapeutic targets. Here, we present the discovery of ER and ZMIZ1 within the same multi-protein assembly by quantitative proteomics, and validated by proximity ligation assay. We characterise ZMIZ1 function by demonstrating a significant decrease in the proliferation of ER-positive cancer cell lines. To establish a role for the ER-ZMIZ1 interaction, we measured the transcriptional changes in the estrogen response post-ZMIZ1 knockdown using an RNA-seq time-course over 24 h. Gene set enrichment analysis of the ZMIZ1-knockdown data identified a specific delay in the response of estradiol-induced cell cycle genes. Integration of ENCODE data with our RNA-seq results identified that ER and ZMIZ1 both bind the promoter of E2F2. We therefore propose that ER and ZMIZ1 interact to enable the efficient estrogenic response at subset of cell cycle genes via a novel ZMIZ1-ER-E2F2 signalling axis. Finally, we show that high ZMIZ1 expression is predictive of worse patient outcome, ER and ZMIZ1 are co-expressed in breast cancer patients in TCGA and METABRIC, and the proteins are co-localised within the nuclei of tumour cell in patient biopsies. In conclusion, we establish that ZMIZ1 is a regulator of the estrogenic cell cycle response and provide evidence of the biological importance of the ER-ZMIZ1 interaction in ER-positive patient tumours, supporting potential clinical relevance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1479-6813
Volume :
73
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of molecular endocrinology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38564418
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1530/JME-23-0133