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The developmental transcription factor IRF6 attenuates ABCG2 gene expression and distinctively reverses stemness phenotype in nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Authors :
Li Sheng Zheng
Yan Hong Lang
Tie Jun Huang
Hao Hu
Si Mei Shi
Yan Mei
Shi Jun Zhang
Chao Nan Qian
Yuan Yuan Qiang
Xinjian Li
Qin Yang
Meng Yao Wang
Bi Jun Huang
Li Xia Peng
Chang-Zhi Li
Liang Xu
Jialing Huang
Fen Lin
Source :
Cancer letters. 431
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), which originates from the nasopharynx, is highly prevalent in Southern China and Southeast Asia, and more than 90% of all NPCs are non-keratinizing undifferentiated cells or poorly differentiated squamous cells. Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are capable of self-renewal and have differentiation potential. These properties form the basis of cancer initiation, development, and radiochemoresistance. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying NPC CSC maintenance remain poorly understood. Here, genomic expression profiling using our previously established monoclonal cellular and animal models revealed that interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) was downregulated in highly metastatic NPC cells, cancer stem-like NPC cells and animal models. Functional assays revealed that elevated IRF6 expression suppressed cell proliferation, growth, CSCs properties and enhanced cell chemotherapeutic sensitivity. However, silencing IRF6 resulted in opposing effects. Moreover, we determined that as a tumor suppressor gene and transcription factor, IRF6 directly bound the upstream region of the ATP-binding cassette sub-family G member 2 (ABCG2) DNA element and suppressed target ABCG2 expression in NPC cells. Consistently, an inverse correlation was observed between the mRNA levels of IRF6 and ABCG2 in clinical NPC samples. With these results, we provide the first evidence that IRF6 directly targets the ABCG2 gene and selectively kills CSCs in NPC and that IRF6 may be a valuable tool for developing new CSC-targeted treatment strategies for undifferentiated NPC patients.

Details

ISSN :
18727980
Volume :
431
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6f84f0f850f7e349d9bcc4bf4cf429b