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Letter
Nature Genetics - 38, 1071 - 1076 (2006)
Published online: 6 August 2006; | doi:10.1038/ng1860

JAK signaling globally counteracts heterochromatic gene silencing

Song Shi, Healani C Calhoun, Fan Xia, Jinghong Li, Long Le & Willis X Li

Department of Biomedical Genetics, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York 14642, USA.

Correspondence should be addressed to Willis X Li willis_li@urmc.rochester.edu

The JAK/STAT pathway has pleiotropic roles in animal development, and its aberrant activation is implicated in multiple human cancers1, 2, 3. JAK/STAT signaling effects have been attributed largely to direct transcriptional regulation by STAT of specific target genes that promote tumor cell proliferation or survival. We show here in a Drosophila melanogaster hematopoietic tumor model, however, that JAK overactivation globally disrupts heterochromatic gene silencing, an epigenetic tumor suppressive mechanism4. This disruption allows derepression of genes that are not direct targets of STAT, as evidenced by suppression of heterochromatin-mediated position effect variegation. Moreover, mutations in the genes encoding heterochromatin components heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1) and Su(var)3-9 enhance tumorigenesis induced by an oncogenic JAK kinase without affecting JAK/STAT signaling. Consistently, JAK loss of function enhances heterochromatic gene silencing, whereas overexpressing HP1 suppresses oncogenic JAK-induced tumors. These results demonstrate that the JAK/STAT pathway regulates cellular epigenetic status and that globally disrupting heterochromatin-mediated tumor suppression is essential for tumorigenesis induced by JAK overactivation.


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Nature Genetics
ISSN: 1061-4036
EISSN: 1546-1718
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