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Genome-wide pattern of TCF7L2/TCF4 chromatin occupancy in colorectal cancer cells

Authors :
Fiona G. G. Nielsen
Rogier Versteeg
Victor Guryev
Evan E. Santo
Edwin Cuppen
Jan Koster
Marc A. van Driel
Isaac J. Nijman
Marc van de Wetering
Pantelis Hatzis
Laurens G. van der Flier
Hendrik G. Stunnenberg
Hans Clevers
Sergei Denissov
Willem Welboren
Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research
Oncogenomics
Cancer Center Amsterdam
Source :
Molecular and Cellular Biology, 28, 2732-2744, Molecular and Cellular Biology, 28, 8, pp. 2732-2744, Molecular and Cellular Biology, 28(8), 2732-2744. American Society for Microbiology, Molecular and cellular biology, 28(8), 2732-2744. American Society for Microbiology
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Wnt signaling activates gene expression through the induced formation of complexes between DNA-binding T-cell factors (TCFs) and the transcriptional coactivator beta-catenin. In colorectal cancer, activating Wnt pathway mutations transform epithelial cells through the inappropriate activation of a TCF7L2/TCF4 target gene program. Through a DNA array-based genome-wide analysis of TCF4 chromatin occupancy, we have identified 6,868 high-confidence TCF4-binding sites in the LS174T colorectal cancer cell line. Most TCF4-binding sites are located at large distances from transcription start sites, while target genes are frequently "decorated" by multiple binding sites. Motif discovery algorithms define the in vivo-occupied TCF4-binding site as evolutionarily conserved A-C/G-A/T-T-C-A-A-A-G motifs. The TCF4-binding regions significantly correlate with Wnt-responsive gene expression profiles derived from primary human adenomas and often behave as beta-catenin/TCF4-dependent enhancers in transient reporter assays.

Details

ISSN :
02707306
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular and Cellular Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....953f1eb0b77dab3eded7f3a9f190af33