Altered MENIN expression disrupts the MAFA differentiation pathway in insulinoma

Z. Hamze, C. Vercherat, A. Bernigaud-Lacheretz, W. Bazzi, R. Bonnavion, J. Lu, A. Calender, C. Pouponnot, P. Bertolino, C. Roche, R. Stein, J. Y. Scoazec, C. X. Zhang, M. Cordier-Bussat

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The protein MENIN is the product of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN1) gene. Altered MENIN expression is one of the few events that are clearly associated with foregut neuroendocrine tumours (NETs), classical oncogenes or tumour suppressors being not involved. One of the current challenges is to understand how alteration of MENIN expression contributes to the development of these tumours. We hypothesised that MENIN might regulate factors maintaining endocrine-differentiated functions. We chose the insulinoma model, a paradigmatic example of well-differentiated pancreatic NETs, to study whether MENIN interferes with the expression of v-MAF musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene homologue A (MAFA), a master glucosedependent transcription factor in differentiated b-cells. Immunohistochemical analysis of a series of human insulinomas revealed a correlated decrease in both MENIN and MAFA. Decreased MAFA expression resulting from targeted Men1 ablation was also consistently observed in mouse insulinomas. In vitro analyses using insulinoma cell lines showed that MENIN regulated MAFA protein and mRNA levels, and bound to Mafa promoter sequences. MENIN knockdown concomitantly decreased mRNA expression of both Mafa and b-cell differentiation markers (Ins1/2, Gck, Slc2a2 and Pdx1) and, in parallel, increased the proliferation rate of tumours as measured by bromodeoxyuridine incorporation. Interestingly, MAFA knockdown alone also increased proliferation rate but did not affect the expression of candidate proliferation genes regulated by MENIN. Finally, MENIN variants with missense mutations detected in patients with MEN1 lost the WT MENIN properties to regulate MAFA. Together, our findings unveil a previously unsuspected MENIN/MAFA connection regarding control of the b-cell differentiation/proliferation balance, which could contribute to tumorigenesis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)833-848
Number of pages16
JournalEndocrine-Related Cancer
Volume20
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Differentiation
  • Endocrine tumour
  • Insulinoma
  • Mafa
  • Men1
  • Menin

Cite this