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The chromatin landscape of primary synovial sarcoma organoids is linked to specific epigenetic mechanisms and dependencies.

Authors :
Boulay G
Cironi L
Garcia SP
Rengarajan S
Xing YH
Lee L
Awad ME
Naigles B
Iyer S
Broye LC
Keskin T
Cauderay A
Fusco C
Letovanec I
Chebib I
Nielsen PG
Tercier S
Cherix S
Nguyen-Ngoc T
Cote G
Choy E
Provero P
Suvà ML
Rivera MN
Stamenkovic I
Riggi N
Source :
Life science alliance [Life Sci Alliance] 2020 Dec 23; Vol. 4 (2). Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Dec 23 (Print Publication: 2021).
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Synovial sarcoma (SyS) is an aggressive mesenchymal malignancy invariably associated with the chromosomal translocation t(X:18; p11:q11), which results in the in-frame fusion of the BAF complex gene SS18 to one of three SSX genes. Fusion of SS18 to SSX generates an aberrant transcriptional regulator, which, in permissive cells, drives tumor development by initiating major chromatin remodeling events that disrupt the balance between BAF-mediated gene activation and polycomb-dependent repression. Here, we developed SyS organoids and performed genome-wide epigenomic profiling of these models and mesenchymal precursors to define SyS-specific chromatin remodeling mechanisms and dependencies. We show that SS18-SSX induces broad BAF domains at its binding sites, which oppose polycomb repressor complex (PRC) 2 activity, while facilitating recruitment of a non-canonical (nc)PRC1 variant. Along with the uncoupling of polycomb complexes, we observed H3K27me3 eviction, H2AK119ub deposition and the establishment of de novo active regulatory elements that drive SyS identity. These alterations are completely reversible upon SS18-SSX depletion and are associated with vulnerability to USP7 loss, a core member of ncPRC1.1. Using the power of primary tumor organoids, our work helps define the mechanisms of epigenetic dysregulation on which SyS cells are dependent.<br /> (© 2020 Boulay et al.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2575-1077
Volume :
4
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Life science alliance
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33361335
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202000808