1. Academic Validation
  2. Mechanisms of disease: multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1-relation to chromatin modifications and transcription regulation

Mechanisms of disease: multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1-relation to chromatin modifications and transcription regulation

  • Nat Clin Pract Endocrinol Metab. 2006 Oct;2(10):562-70. doi: 10.1038/ncpendmet0292.
Koen Ma Dreijerink 1 Jo Wm Höppener Ht Marc Timmers Cornelis Jm Lips
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Internal Medicine and Endocrinology, University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Abstract

Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) is a hereditary tumor syndrome characterized by tumors of the parathyroid glands, the pancreatic islets, the pituitary gland, the adrenal glands, as well as by neuroendocrine carcinoid tumors, often at a young age. Causal to the syndrome are germline mutations of the MEN1 tumor-suppressor gene. Identification of gene-mutation carriers has enabled presymptomatic diagnosis and treatment of MEN1-related lesions. The product of the MEN1 gene is the nuclear protein menin. Recent observations indicate several functions for menin in the regulation of transcription, serving either as a repressor or as an activator: menin interacts with the activator-protein-1-family transcription factor JunD, changing it from an oncoprotein into a tumor-suppressor protein, putatively by recruitment of histone deacetylase complexes; menin maintains transforming growth factor beta mediated signal transduction involved in parathyroid hormone and Prolactin gene expression; and menin is an integral component of Histone Methyltransferase complexes. In this capacity menin is a regulator of expression of the cyclin-dependent-kinase inhibitors p18INK4C and p27Kip1; furthermore, menin serves as a co-activator of Estrogen Receptor mediated transcription, by recruiting methyltransferase activity to lysine 4 of histone 3 at the estrogen responsive TFF1(pS2) gene promoter. We propose that menin links transcription-factor function to histone-modification pathways and that this is crucial for MEN1 tumorigenesis. Understanding the molecular pathology of MEN1 tumorigenesis will lead to new therapeutic strategies.

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