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Wiley, Molecular Carcinogenesis, 2(29), p. 76-86, 2000

DOI: 10.1002/1098-2744(200010)29:2<76::aid-mc4>3.0.co;2-y

Wiley, Molecular Carcinogenesis, 2(29), p. 76-86

DOI: 10.1002/1098-2744(200010)29:2<76::aid-mc4>3.3.co;2-p

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Direct recruitment of N-myc to target gene promoters

Journal article published in 2000 by Susanna M. Mac, Caroline A. D'Cunha, Peggy J. Farnham ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The N-myc gene is amplified in 20-25% of human neuroblastomas, and this amplification serves as a poor prognostic factor. However, few genes have been determined to be direct targets of N-myc. Our current studies focused on identifying N-myc target genes, especially those affected in cells such as neuroblastomas that have high levels of N-myc protein. To pursue this goal, we performed differential expression screens with cell-culture systems containing high versus low levels of N-myc. The design of our experiments was such that we should identify genes both upregulated and downregulated by N-myc. Accordingly, we identified 22 genes upregulated by N-myc and one gene downregulated by N-myc. However, only five of these genes responded to increased N-myc levels in more than one system. Further analysis of the regulation of these genes required determining whether they were direct or indirect targets of N-myc. Therefore, we used a formaldehyde crosslinking and immunoprecipitation procedure to determine whether N-myc was bound to the promoters of these putative target genes in living cells. We found that low levels of N-myc were bound to the promoters of the telomerase and prothymosin genes in neuroblastoma cells having low amounts of N-myc but that the amounts of N-myc bound to these promoters greatly increased with overexpression of N-myc. However, the amount of max bound to the promoters was high before and after induction of N-myc. Therefore, our studies suggest that N-myc competes with other max partners for binding to target promoters. Our use of the chromatin immunoprecipitation assay suggests a molecular explanation for the consequences of amplification of the N-myc gene in neuroblastomas.