Network of mutually repressive metastasis regulators can promote cell heterogeneity and metastatic transitions

Menée in vitro, cette étude met en évidence des mécanismes qui, par l'interaction entre deux protéines exerçant des effets opposés dans la régulation du processus métastatique (RKIP et BACH1), permettent à une sous-population cellulaire d'acquérir des caractéristiques prométastatiques sans modification génétique

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, sous presse, 2014, article en libre accès

Résumé en anglais

The sources and consequences of nongenetic variability in metastatic progression are largely unknown. To address these questions, we characterized a transcriptional regulatory network for the metastasis suppressor Raf kinase inhibitory protein (RKIP). We previously showed that the transcription factor BACH1 is negatively regulated by RKIP and promotes breast cancer metastasis. Here we demonstrate that BACH1 acts in a double-negative (overall positive) feedback loop to inhibit RKIP transcription in breast cancer cells. BACH1 also negatively regulates its own transcription. Analysis of the BACH1 network reveals the existence of an inverse relationship between BACH1 and RKIP involving both monostable and bistable transitions that can potentially give rise to nongenetic variability. Single-cell analysis confirmed monostable and bistable-like behavior. Treatment with histone deacetylase inhibitors or depletion of the polycomb repressor enhancer of zeste homolog 2 altered relative RKIP and BACH1 levels in a manner consistent with a prometastatic state. Together, our results suggest that the mutually repressive relationship between metastatic regulators such as RKIP and BACH1 can play a key role in determining metastatic progression in cancer.