Cell Reports (Jul 2024)

Hypoxia-induced CTCF promotes EMT in breast cancer

  • Parik Kakani,
  • Shruti Ganesh Dhamdhere,
  • Deepak Pant,
  • Rushikesh Joshi,
  • Jharna Mishra,
  • Atul Samaiya,
  • Sanjeev Shukla

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 7
p. 114367

Abstract

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Summary: Cancer cells experiencing hypoxic stress employ epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) to undergo metastasis through rewiring of the chromatin landscape, epigenetics, and importantly, gene expression. Here, we showed that hypoxia modulates the epigenetic landscape on CTCF promoter and upregulates its expression. Hypoxia-driven epigenetic regulation, specifically DNA demethylation mediated by TET2, is a prerequisite for CTCF induction. Mechanistically, in hypoxic conditions, Hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha (HIF1α) binds to the unmethylated CTCF promoter, causing transcriptional upregulation. Further, we uncover the pivotal role of CTCF in promoting EMT as loss of CTCF abrogated invasiveness of hypoxic breast cancer cells. These findings highlight the functional contribution of HIF1α-CTCF axis in promoting EMT in hypoxic breast cancer cells. Lastly, CTCF expression is alleviated and the potential for EMT is diminished when the HIF1α binding is particularly disrupted through the dCas9-DNMT3A system-mediated maintenance of DNA methylation on the CTCF promoter. This axis may offer a unique therapeutic target in breast cancer.

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