Canonical WNT signaling-dependent gating of MYC requires a noncanonical CTCF function at a distal binding site

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Abstract

Abnormal WNT signaling increases MYC expression in colon cancer cells in part via oncogenic super-enhancer-(OSE)-mediated gating of the active MYC to the nuclear pore in a poorly understood process. We show here that the principal tenet of the WNT-regulated MYC gating, facilitating nuclear export of the MYC mRNA, is regulated by a CTCF binding site (CTCFBS) within the OSE to confer growth advantage in HCT-116 cells. To achieve this, the CTCFBS directs the WNT-dependent trafficking of the OSE to the nuclear pore from intra-nucleoplasmic positions in a stepwise manner. Once the OSE reaches a peripheral position, which is triggered by a CTCFBS-mediated CCAT1 eRNA activation, its final stretch (≤0.7 μm) to the nuclear pore requires the recruitment of AHCTF1, a key nucleoporin, to the CTCFBS. Thus, a WNT/ß-catenin-AHCTF1-CTCF-eRNA circuit enables the OSE to promote pathological cell growth by coordinating the trafficking of the active MYC gene within the 3D nuclear architecture.

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Chachoua, I., Tzelepis, I., Dai, H., Lim, J. P., Lewandowska-Ronnegren, A., Casagrande, F. B., … Göndör, A. (2022). Canonical WNT signaling-dependent gating of MYC requires a noncanonical CTCF function at a distal binding site. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27868-3

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