Bioinformatics and Systems Medicine Laboratory
General information | Expression | Regulation | Mutation | Interaction

Basic Information

Gene ID

25855

Name

BRMS1

Synonymous

-;breast cancer metastasis suppressor 1;BRMS1;breast cancer metastasis suppressor 1

Definition

breast cancer metastasis-suppressor 1

Position

11q13-q13.2

Gene type

protein-coding

Source

Count: 2; Generif,UniProt

Sentence

Abstract

Phosphorylation of RelA/p65 promotes DNMT-1 recruitment to chromatin and represses transcription of the tumor metastasis suppressor gene BRMS1.

The majority of patients with lung cancer present with metastatic disease. Chronic inflammation and subsequent activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) have been associated with the development of cancers. The RelA/p65 subunit of NF-kappaB is typically associated with transcriptional activation. In this report we show that RelA/p65 can function as an active transcriptional repressor through enhanced methylation of the BRMS1 (breast cancer metastasis suppressor 1) metastasis suppressor gene promoter via direct recruitment of DNMT-1 (DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase 1) to chromatin in response to tumor necrosis factor (TNF). TNF-mediated phosphorylation of S276 on RelA/p65 is required for RelA/p65-DNMT-1 interactions, chromatin loading of DNMT-1 and subsequent BRMS1 promoter methylation and transcriptional repression. The ability of RelA/p65 to function as an active transcriptional repressor is promoter specific, as the NF-kappaB-regulated gene cIAP2 (cellular inhibitor of apoptosis 2) is transcriptionally activated whereas BRMS1 is repressed under identical conditions. Small-molecule inhibition of either of the minimal interacting domains between RelA/p65-DNMT-1 and RelA/p65-BRMS1 promoter abrogates BRMS1 methylation and its transcriptional repression. The ability of RelA/p65 to directly recruit DNMT-1 to chromatin, resulting in promoter-specific methylation and transcriptional repression of tumor metastasis suppressor gene BRMS1, highlights a new mechanism through which NF-kappaB can regulate metastatic disease, and offers a potential target for newer-generation epigenetic oncopharmaceuticals.

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