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HMGN3 represses transcription of epithelial regulators to promote migration of cholangiocarcinoma in a SNAI2-dependent manner.

Supannika SorinSho KubotaSofiane HamidiTakako Yokomizo-NakanoKulthida VaeteewoottacharnSopit WongkhamSakda WaraasawapatiChawalit PairojkulJie BaiMariko MoriiGuojun ShengKanlayanee SawanyawisuthGoro Sashida
Published in: FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2022)
High mobility group nucleosome-binding protein 3 (HMGN3), a member of the HMGN family, modulates the structure of chromatin and regulates transcription through transcription factors. HMGN3 has been implicated in the development of various cancers; however, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We herein demonstrated that the high expression of HMGN3 correlated with the metastasis of liver fluke infection-induced cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) in patients in northeastern Thailand. The knockdown of HMGN3 in CCA cells significantly impaired the oncogenic properties of colony formation, migration, and invasion. HMGN3 inhibited the expression of and blocked the intracellular polarities of epithelial regulator genes, such as the CDH1/E-cadherin and TJAP1 genes in CCA cells. A chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing analysis revealed that HMGN3 required the transcription factor SNAI2 to bind to and repress the expression of epithelial regulator genes, at least in part, due to histone deacetylases (HDACs), the pharmacological inhibition of which reactivated these epithelial regulators in CCA, leading to impairing the cell migration capacity. Therefore, the overexpression of HMGN3 represses the transcription of and blocks the polarities of epithelial regulators in CCA cells in a manner that is dependent on the SNAI2 gene and HDACs.
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