Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 286, Issue 31, 5 August 2011, Pages 27176-27182
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Gene Regulation
Synthetic Reversal of Epigenetic Silencing*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.C111.229567Get rights and content
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Controlling cell fate-determining gene expression is key to stem cell differentiation, tissue regeneration, and cancer therapy. To date, custom-built transcription factors recognize the information encoded in specific DNA sequences. Chromatin proteins undergo covalent modifications and form complexes that encode a second layer of information that determines proximal gene activity. Here, we employ a novel gene-targeting approach that exploits a specific chromatin modification to reactivate silenced loci in human cells. We used the human Polycomb chromatin protein and homologues from other species to construct modular synthetic transcription factors, called Pc-TFs, that recognize the repressive trimethyl-histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27me3) signal and switch silenced genes to an active state. Pc-TF expression in U2OS osteosarcoma cells leads to increased transcription of the senescence locus CDKN2A (p16) and other loci in a chromodomain- and activation module-dependent manner, a switch to a senescence phenotype, and reduced cell proliferation. These results indicate that silenced developmental regulators can be reactivated by a synthetic transcription factor that interacts with chromatin rather than DNA, resulting in an altered cell state. As such, our work extends the flexibility of transcription factor engineering and is the first example of chromatin-mediated synthetic transcription factor targeting.

Cell Differentiation
Chromatin
Gene Regulation
Histone Methylation
Transcription Regulation
Polycomb
Synthetic Transcription Factors

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*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants GM057476 and GM36373 (to P. A. S.) and 1F32GM087860 (to K. A. H.).

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Table S1 and Figs. S1–S4.