Publication: Interferon regulatory factor 4 modulates epigenetic silencing and cancer-critical pathways in melanoma cells
Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Sobhiafshar, Ulduz
Cakici, Betul
Yilmaz, Erdem
Ayhan, Nalan Yildiz
Hedaya, Laila
Ayhan, Mustafa Can
Yerinde, Cansu
Alankus, Yasemin Begum
Emre, N. C. Tolga
Advisor
Publication Date
2024
Language
en
Type
Journal article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) was initially identified as a key controller in lymphocyte differentiation and function, and subsequently as a dependency factor and therapy target in lymphocyte-derived cancers. In melanocytes, IRF4 takes part in pigmentation. Although genetic studies have implicated IRF4 in melanoma, how IRF4 functions in melanoma cells has remained largely elusive. Here, we confirmed prevalent IRF4 expression in melanoma and showed that high expression is linked to dependency in cells and mortality in patients. Analysis of genes activated by IRF4 uncovered, as a novel target category, epigenetic silencing factors involved in DNA methylation (DNMT1, DNMT3B, UHRF1) and histone H3K27 methylation (EZH2). Consequently, we show that IRF4 controls the expression of tumour suppressor genes known to be silenced by these epigenetic modifications, for instance cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors CDKN1A and CDKN1B, the PI3-AKT pathway regulator PTEN, and primary cilium components. Furthermore, IRF4 modulates activity of key downstream oncogenic pathways, such as WNT/beta-catenin and AKT, impacting cell proliferation and survival. Accordingly, IRF4 modifies the effectiveness of pertinent epigenetic drugs on melanoma cells, a finding that encourages further studies towards therapeutic targeting of IRF4 in melanoma. In this study, we showed that high interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) expression is linked to dependency in melanoma cells and mortality in patients. Transcriptomic analysis uncovered epigenetic silencing factors as a novel target category. IRF4 consequently controls the expression of tumour suppressor genes known to be silenced by these epigenetic factors, and the activity of key downstream oncogenic pathways. image
Description
Source:
Molecular Oncology
Publisher:
Wiley
Keywords:
Subject
Oncology