The transcriptional co-activator NCOA6 promotes estrogen-induced GREB1 transcription by recruiting ER? and enhancing enhancer-promoter interactions.
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ABSTRACT: Estrogen and its cognate receptor, ER?, regulate cell proliferation, differentiation, and carcinogenesis in the endometrium by controlling gene transcription. ER? requires co-activators to mediate transcription via mechanisms that are largely uncharacterized. Herein, using growth-regulating estrogen receptor binding 1 (GREB1) as an ER? target gene in Ishikawa cells, we demonstrate that nuclear receptor co-activator 6 (NCOA6) is essential for estradiol (E2)/ER?-activated GREB1 transcription. We found that NCOA6 associates with the GREB1 promoter and enhancer in an E2-independent manner and that NCOA6 knockout reduces chromatin looping, enhancer-promoter interactions, and basal GREB1 expression in the absence of E2. In the presence of E2, ER? bound the GREB1 enhancer and also associated with its promoter, and p300, myeloid/lymphoid or mixed-lineage leukemia protein 4 (MLL4), and RNA polymerase II were recruited to the GREB1 enhancer and promoter. Consequently, the levels of the histone modifications H3K4me1/3, H3K9ac, and H3K27ac were significantly increased; enhancer and promoter regions were transcribed; and GREB1 mRNA was robustly transcribed. NCOA6 knockout reduced ER? recruitment and abolished all of the aforementioned E2-induced events, making GREB1 completely insensitive to E2 induction. We also found that GREB1-deficient Ishikawa cells are much more resistant to chemotherapy and that human endometrial cancers with low GREB1 expression predict poor overall survival. These results indicate that NCOA6 has an essential role in ER?-mediated transcription by increasing enhancer-promoter interactions through chromatin looping and by recruiting RNA polymerase II and the histone-code modifiers p300 and MLL4. Moreover, GREB1 loss may predict chemoresistance of endometrial cancer.
SUBMITTER: Tong Z
PROVIDER: S-EPMC6926448 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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