Description
The LEF/TCF family of transcription factors are downstream effectors of the WNT signaling pathway, which drives colon tumorigenesis.  LEF/TCFs have a DNA sequence-specific HMG box that binds Wnt Response Elements (WREs).  The E tail isoforms of TCFs are alternatively spliced to include a second DNA binding domain called the C-clamp.  We show that induction of a dominant negative C-clamp version of TCF1 (dnTCF1E) induces a p21-dependent stall in the growth of DLD1 colon cancer cells.  Induction of a C-clamp mutant did not induce p21 or stall cell growth.  Microarray analysis revealed that induction of p21 by dnTCF1EWT correlated with a decrease in expression of p21 suppressors that act at multiple levels from transcription (SP5, YAP1, RUNX1), to RNA stability (MSI2), and protein stability (CUL4A).  We show that the C-clamp is a sequence specific DNA binding domain that can make contacts with 5-RCCG-3 elements upstream or downstream of WREs.  The C-clamp-RCCG interaction was critical for TCF1E mediated transcriptional control of p21-connected target gene promoters.  Our results indicate that a WNT/p21 circuit is driven by C-clamp target gene selection.