GATA zinc finger protein p66β promotes breast cancer cell migration by acting as a co-activator of Snail.
Xiuqun ZouLi MaYihong ZhangQun ZhangChu XuDan ZhangYimin ChuJie ZhangMengying LiHui ZhangJiamin WangChicheng PengGang WeiYingjie WuZhaoyuan HouHao JiaPublished in: Cell death & disease (2023)
The transcriptional repressor Snail induces EMT during embryonic development and tumor metastasis. Growing evidence indicates that Snail functions as a trans-activator to induce gene expression; however, the underlying mechanism remains elusive. Here, we report that Snail cooperates with GATA zinc finger protein p66β to transactivate genes in breast cancer cells. Biologically, depletion of p66β reduces cell migration and lung metastasis in BALB/c mice. Mechanistically, Snail interacts with p66β and cooperatively induces gene transcription. Notably, a group of genes induced by Snail harbor conserved G-rich cis-elements (5'-GGGAGG-3', designated as G-box) in their proximal promoter regions. Snail directly binds to G-box via its zinc fingers and transactivates the G-box-containing promoters. p66β enhances Snail binding affinity to G-box, whereas depletion of p66β results in a decreased binding affinity of Snail to the endogenous promoters and concomitantly reduces the transcription of Snail-induced genes. Taken together, these data demonstrated that p66β is critical for Snail-mediated cell migration by acting as a co-activator of Snail to induce genes containing G-box elements in the promoters.
Keyphrases
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- transcription factor
- cell migration
- gene expression
- binding protein
- genome wide identification
- signaling pathway
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- dna binding
- breast cancer cells
- type diabetes
- nuclear factor
- machine learning
- young adults
- endothelial cells
- copy number
- diabetic rats
- protein protein
- bioinformatics analysis
- drug induced
- genome wide analysis
- heat stress