Histone H1.3 suppresses H19 noncoding RNA expression and cell growth of ovarian cancer cells.
By: Magdalena Medrzycki, Yunzhe Zhang, Weijia Zhang, Kaixiang Cao, Chenyi Pan, Nathalie Lailler, John F McDonald, Eric Bouhassira, Yuhong Fan

School of Biology and The Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience, Georgia Institute of Technology.
2014-9-11; doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-2922
Abstract

Ovarian cancer is a deadly gynecological malignancy for which novel biomarkers and therapeutic targets are imperative for improving survival. Previous studies have suggested the expression pattern of linker histone variants as potential biomarkers for ovarian cancer. To investigate the role of histone H1 in ovarian cancer cells, we characterize individual H1 variants and overexpress one of the major somatic H1 variants, H1.3, in OVCAR-3 epithelial ovarian cancer cell line. We find that overexpression of H1.3 decreases the growth rate and colony formation of OVCAR-3 cells. We identify histone H1.3 as a specific repressor for the non-coding oncogene H19. Overexpression of H1.3 suppresses H19 expression and knockdown of H1.3 increases its expression in multiple ovarian epithelial cancer cell lines. Furthermore, we demonstrate that histone H1.3 overexpression leads to increased occupancy of H1.3 at the H19 regulator region encompassing the imprinting control region (ICR), concomitant with increased DNA methylation and reduced occupancy of the insulator protein CTCF at the ICR. Finally, we demonstrate that H1.3 overexpression and H19 knockdown synergistically decreases the growth rate of ovarian cancer cells. Our findings suggest that H1.3 dramatically inhibits H19 expression which contributes to the suppression of epithelial ovarian carcinogenesis.



Copyright © 2014, American Association for Cancer Research.

PMID:25205099






Copyright 2026 InterMDnet | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | System Requirements