MEIS-mediated suppression of human prostate cancer growth and metastasis through HOXB13-dependent regulation of proteoglycans

Author:

VanOpstall Calvin1,Perike Srikanth2,Brechka Hannah1,Gillard Marc3,Lamperis Sophia2,Zhu Baizhen3,Brown Ryan2,Bhanvadia Raj4,Vander Griend Donald J2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Committee on Cancer Biology, The University of Chicago, Chicago, United States

2. Department of Pathology, The University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, United States

3. Department of Surgery, Section of Urology, The University of Chicago, Chicago, United States

4. Department of Urology, UT Southwestern, Dallas, United States

Abstract

The molecular roles of HOX transcriptional activity in human prostate epithelial cells remain unclear, impeding the implementation of new treatment strategies for cancer prevention and therapy. MEIS proteins are transcription factors that bind and direct HOX protein activity. MEIS proteins are putative tumor suppressors that are frequently silenced in aggressive forms of prostate cancer. Here we show that MEIS1 expression is sufficient to decrease proliferation and metastasis of prostate cancer cells in vitro and in vivo murine xenograft models. HOXB13 deletion demonstrates that the tumor-suppressive activity of MEIS1 is dependent on HOXB13. Integration of ChIP-seq and RNA-seq data revealed direct and HOXB13-dependent regulation of proteoglycans including decorin (DCN) as a mechanism of MEIS1-driven tumor suppression. These results define and underscore the importance of MEIS1-HOXB13 transcriptional regulation in suppressing prostate cancer progression and provide a mechanistic framework for the investigation of HOXB13 mutants and oncogenic cofactors when MEIS1/2 are silenced.

Funder

U.S. Department of Defense

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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