Back to Search Start Over

NSD2 E1099K drives relapse in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia by disrupting 3D chromatin organization

Authors :
Sonali Narang
Nikki A. Evensen
Jason Saliba
Joanna Pierro
Mignon L. Loh
Patrick A. Brown
Heather Mulder
Ying Shao
John Easton
Xiaotu Ma
Aristotelis Tsirigos
William L. Carroll
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

The NSD2 p.E1099K (EK) mutation has been shown to be enriched in patients with relapsed ALL and found to play a role in clonal fitness dependent on the underlying genetic/epigenetic landscape of the cells. To uncover 3D chromatin architecture-related mechanisms underlying drug resistance, we systematically integrated Hi-C, ATAC-seq, RNA-seq and ChIP-seq data from three B-ALL cell lines heterozygous for NSD2 EK (RS4;11, RCH-ACV, SEM) and assessed changes upon knockdown. NSD2 knockdown revealed widespread remodeling of the 3D genome, specifically in terms of compartmentalization. Systematic integration of these datasets revealed significant switches in A/B compartments with a strong bias towards B compartments upon knockdown, suggesting that NSD2 EK plays a prominent role in maintaining A compartments through enrichment of H3K36me2 epigenetic marks. In contrast, we identified few changes in intra-TAD activity suggesting that the NSD2 EK impacts transcriptional changes through a remarkable dependence on compartmentalization. Furthermore, EK-mediated reorganization of compartments highlights the existence of a common core of compacting loci shared across the three cell lines that explain previously described phenotypes as well as serve as targets for therapeutic intervention. This study offers a novel mechanism by which NSD2 EK drives clonal evolution and drug resistance.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f9db0d76aa4e83e61a0e83e8dde0fc2e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.24.481835