Methylation of conserved CpG sites neighboring the beta retinoic acid response element may mediate retinoic acid receptor beta gene silencing in MCF-7 breast cancer cells
A. Arapshian et al., Methylation of conserved CpG sites neighboring the beta retinoic acid response element may mediate retinoic acid receptor beta gene silencing in MCF-7 breast cancer cells, ONCOGENE, 19(35), 2000, pp. 4066-4070
We investigated the mechanism of retinoic acid receptor (RAR) beta 2 gene s
ilencing in breast cancer cells. Transfection experiments indicated that MC
F-7 cells transactivate an exogenous beta 2 promoter (-1470/+156) to the sa
me extent as MTSV1.7 breast epithelial cells, which express endogenous RAR
beta 2. This was true even in the context of replicated chromatin, suggesti
ng a cis-acting rather than a trans-acting defect. Cytosine methylation, a
cis-acting DNA modification, has been implicated in RAR beta 2 silencing in
cancer cells. Upon bisulfite genomic sequencing, we found that 3 CpG sites
in the beta 2 RARE region were variably methylated in MCF-7 cells but were
not methylated in MTSV1.7 cells or in 2 MDA-MB-231 subclones that differed
in RAR beta 2 expression (high in clone A2, low in clone A4). However, the
5'-UTR region was hypermethylated in clone A4 relative to clone A2 cells.
Following 5-azacytidine treatment, RA and trichostatin A markedly induced R
AR beta 2 expression in MCF-7 cells but not in MDA-MB-231 clone A4 cells. A
beta 2 RARE reporter construct in which the methylation-susceptible cytosi
nes in the sense strand were replaced by thymine displayed marked loss of a
ctivity in a replicated chromatin-dependent manner. We conclude that cytosi
ne methylation contributes to RAR beta 2 gene silencing in MCF-7 cells and
that methylation of the RARE region may be particularly important.