Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research (Feb 2007)

Distribution of Menin-Occupied Regions in Chromatin Specifies a Broad Role of Menin in Transcriptional Regulation

  • Sunita K. Agarwal,
  • Soren Impey,
  • Shannon McWeeney,
  • Peter C. Scacheri,
  • Francis S. Collins,
  • Richard H. Goodman,
  • Allen M. Spiegel,
  • Stephen J. Marx

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1593/neo.06706
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
pp. 101 – 107

Abstract

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Menin is the protein product of the MEN1 tumorsuppressor gene; one allele of MEN1 is inactivated in the germ line of patients with “multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1” (MEN1) cancer syndrome. Menin interacts with several proteins involved in transcriptional regulation. RNA expression analyses have identified several menin-regulated genes that could represent proximal or distal interaction sites for menin. This report presents a substantial and unbiased sampling of menin-occupied chromatin regions using Serial Analysis of Chromatin Occupancy; this method combines chromatin immunoprecipitation with Serial Analysis of Gene Expression. Hundreds of menin-occupied genomic sites were identified in promoter regions (32% of menin-occupied loci), near the 3' end of genes (14%), or inside genes (21%), extending other data about menin recruitments to many sites of transcriptional activity. A large number of meninoccupied sites (33%) were located outside known gene regions. Additional annotation of the human genome could help in identifying genes at these loci, or these might be gene-free regions of the genome where menin occupancy could play some structural or regulatory role. Menin occupancy at many intragenic positions distant from the core promoter reveals an unexpected type of menin target region at many loci in the genome. These unbiased data also suggest that menin could play a broad role in transcriptional regulation.

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