Stress from nucleotide depletion activates the transcriptional regulator HEXIM1 to suppress melanoma Journal Article


Authors: Tan, J. L.; Fogley, R. D.; Flynn, R. A.; Ablain, J.; Yang, S.; Saint-André, V.; Fan, Z. P.; Do, B. T.; Laga, A. C.; Fujinaga, K.; Santoriello, C.; Greer, C. B.; Kim, Y. J.; Clohessy, J. G.; Bothmer, A.; Pandell, N.; Avagyan, S.; Brogie, J. E.; van Rooijen, E.; Hagedorn, E. J.; Shyh-Chang, N.; White, R. M.; Price, D. H.; Pandolfi, P. P.; Peterlin, B. M.; Zhou, Y.; Kim, T. H.; Asara, J. M.; Chang, H. Y.; Young, R. A.; Zon, L. I.
Article Title: Stress from nucleotide depletion activates the transcriptional regulator HEXIM1 to suppress melanoma
Abstract: Studying cancer metabolism gives insight into tumorigenic survival mechanisms and susceptibilities. In melanoma, we identify HEXIM1, a transcription elongation regulator, as a melanoma tumor suppressor that responds to nucleotide stress. HEXIM1 expression is low in melanoma. Its overexpression in a zebrafish melanoma model suppresses cancer formation, while its inactivation accelerates tumor onset in vivo. Knockdown of HEXIM1 rescues zebrafish neural crest defects and human melanoma proliferation defects that arise from nucleotide depletion. Under nucleotide stress, HEXIM1 is induced to form an inhibitory complex with P-TEFb, the kinase that initiates transcription elongation, to inhibit elongation at tumorigenic genes. The resulting alteration in gene expression also causes anti-tumorigenic RNAs to bind to and be stabilized by HEXIM1. HEXIM1 plays an important role in inhibiting cancer cell-specific gene transcription while also facilitating anti-cancer gene expression. Our study reveals an important role for HEXIM1 in coupling nucleotide metabolism with transcriptional regulation in melanoma. © 2016 Elsevier Inc..
Journal Title: Molecular Cell
Volume: 62
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1097-2765
Publisher: Cell Press  
Date Published: 2016-04-07
Start Page: 34
End Page: 46
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2016.03.013
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC4836061
PUBMED: 27058786
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 May 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Richard Mark White
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