The opposing transcriptional functions of Sin3a and c-Myc are required to maintain tissue homeostasi

Author:  ["Elisabete M. Nascimento","Claire L. Cox","Stewart MacArthur","Shobbir Hussain","Matthew Trotter","Sandra Blanco","Menon Suraj","Jennifer Nichols","Bernd Kübler","Salvador Aznar Benitah","Brian Hendrich","Duncan T. Odom","Michaela Frye"]

Publication:  Nature Cell Biology

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Tags:  Regulatory networks   Transcription   Biological

Abstract

How the proto-oncogene c-Myc balances the processes of stem-cell self-renewal, proliferation and differentiation in adult tissues is largely unknown. We explored c-Myc’s transcriptional roles at the epidermal differentiation complex, a locus essential for skin maturation. Binding of c-Myc can simultaneously recruit (Klf4, Ovol-1) and displace (Cebpa, Mxi1 and Sin3a) specific sets of differentiation-specific transcriptional regulators to epidermal differentiation complex genes. We found that Sin3a causes deacetylation of c-Myc protein to directly repress c-Myc activity. In the absence of Sin3a, genomic recruitment of c-Myc to the epidermal differentiation complex is enhanced, and re-activation of c-Myc-target genes drives aberrant epidermal proliferation and differentiation. Simultaneous deletion of c-Myc and Sin3a reverts the skin phenotype to normal. Our results identify how the balance of two transcriptional key regulators can maintain tissue homeostasis through a negative feedback loop. The transcriptional role of c-Myc in maintaining tissue homeostasis is still unclear. Using mice conditionally expressing an activated form of c-Myc in the epidermis, and genome-wide approaches, Frye and colleagues show that c-Myc modulates the expression of the epidermal differentiation complex locus in the skin by displacing or recruiting specific transcriptional regulators. c-Myc activity is negatively regulated in vivo in this context by Sin3a.

Cite this article

Nascimento, E., Cox, C., MacArthur, S. et al. The opposing transcriptional functions of Sin3a and c-Myc are required to maintain tissue homeostasis. Nat Cell Biol 13, 1395–1405 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb2385

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