posted on 2013-11-07, 00:00authored byPing Yin, Damian Roqueiro, Lei Huang, Jonas K. Owen, Anna Xie, Antonia Navarro, Diana Monsivais, John S. Coon V, J. Julie Kim, Yang Dai, Serdar E. Bulun
Background: Progesterone, via its nuclear receptor (PR), exerts an overall tumorigenic effect on both uterine fibroid
(leiomyoma) and breast cancer tissues, whereas the antiprogestin RU486 inhibits growth of these tissues through an
unknown mechanism. Here, we determined the interaction between common or cell-specific genome-wide binding sites of
PR and mRNA expression in RU486-treated uterine leiomyoma and breast cancer cells.
Principal Findings: ChIP-sequencing revealed 31,457 and 7,034 PR-binding sites in breast cancer and uterine leiomyoma
cells, respectively; 1,035 sites overlapped in both cell types. Based on the chromatin-PR interaction in both cell types, we
statistically refined the consensus progesterone response element to GNACAN N NTGTNC. We identified two striking differences
between uterine leiomyoma and breast cancer cells. First, the cis-regulatory elements for HSF, TEF-1, and C/EBPa and b were
statistically enriched at genomic RU486/PR-targets in uterine leiomyoma, whereas E2F, FOXO1, FOXA1, and FOXF sites were
preferentially enriched in breast cancer cells. Second, 51.5% of RU486-regulated genes in breast cancer cells but only 6.6%
of RU486-regulated genes in uterine leiomyoma cells contained a PR-binding site within 5 kb from their transcription start
sites (TSSs), whereas 75.4% of RU486-regulated genes contained a PR-binding site farther than 50 kb from their TSSs in
uterine leiomyoma cells. RU486 regulated only seven mRNAs in both cell types. Among these, adipophilin (PLIN2), a prodifferentiation
gene, was induced via RU486 and PR via the same regulatory region in both cell types.
Conclusions: Our studies have identified
molecular components in a RU486/PR-controlled gene network involved in the
regulation of cell growth, cell migration, and extracellular matrix function. Tissue-specific and common patterns of genomewide
PR binding and gene regulation may determine the therapeutic effects of antiprogestins in uterine fibroids and breast
cancer.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health Grant P01-057877, and the Chicago Biomedical Consortium with support from The Searle
Funds at The Chicago Community Trust.
History
Publisher Statement
2012 Yin et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted
use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.