SUMMARY While chromosomal rearrangements fusing the androgen-regulated gene TMPRSS2 to the oncogenic ETS transcription factor ERG occur in approximately 50% of prostate cancers, how the fusion products regulate prostate cancer remains unclear. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with massively parallel sequencing (ChIP-Seq), we found that ERG disrupts androgen receptor (AR) signaling by inhibiting AR expression, binding to and inhibiting AR activity at gene-specific loci, and inducing repressive epigenetic programs via direct activation of the H3K27 methyltransferase EZH2, a Polycomb group protein. These findings provide a working model in which TMPRSS2-ERG plays a critical role in cancer progression by disrupting lineage-specific differentiation of the prostate and potentiating the EZH2-mediated de-differentiation program.
A full description of the human proteome relies on the challenging task of detecting mature and changing forms of protein molecules in the body. Large scale proteome analysis1 has routinely involved digesting intact proteins followed by inferred protein identification using mass spectrometry (MS)2. This “bottom up” process affords a high number of identifications (not always unique to a single gene). However, complications arise from incomplete or ambiguous2 characterization of alternative splice forms, diverse modifications (e.g., acetylation and methylation), and endogenous protein cleavages, especially when combinations of these create complex patterns of intact protein isoforms and species3. “Top down” interrogation of whole proteins can overcome these problems for individual proteins4,5, but has not been achieved on a proteome scale due to the lack of intact protein fractionation methods that are well integrated with tandem MS. Here we show, using a new four dimensional (4D) separation system, identification of 1,043 gene products from human cells that are dispersed into >3,000 protein species created by post-translational modification, RNA splicing, and proteolysis. The overall system produced >20-fold increases in both separation power and proteome coverage, enabling the identification of proteins up to 105 kilodaltons and those with up to 11 transmembrane helices. Many previously undetected isoforms of endogenous human proteins were mapped, including changes in multiply-modified species in response to accelerated cellular aging (senescence) induced by DNA damage. Integrated with the latest version of the Swiss-Prot database6, the data provide precise correlations to individual genes and proof-of-concept for large scale interrogation of whole protein molecules. The technology promises to improve the link between proteomics data and complex phenotypes in basic biology and disease research7.
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