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Loss of synergistic transcriptional feedback loops drives diverse B-cell cancers

Authors :
Yi-Shan Lee
Jacqueline E. Payton
Rodney A. Kowalewski
Sarah C. Pyfrom
Eugene M. Oltz
Leigh R. Berman
Jessica J. Sun
Nicholas R. Grams
Jennifer A. Schmidt
Olivia I. Koues
Amanda F. Cashen
Jared M. Andrews
Eric J. Duncavage
Source :
EBioMedicine, Vol 71, Iss, Pp 103559-(2021), EBioMedicine
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Background The most common B-cell cancers, chronic lymphocytic leukemia/lymphoma (CLL), follicular and diffuse large B-cell (FL, DLBCL) lymphomas, have distinct clinical courses, yet overlapping “cell-of-origin”. Dynamic changes to the epigenome are essential regulators of B-cell differentiation. Therefore, we reasoned that these distinct cancers may be driven by shared mechanisms of disruption in transcriptional circuitry. Methods We compared purified malignant B-cells from 52 patients with normal B-cell subsets (germinal center centrocytes and centroblasts, naive and memory B-cells) from 36 donor tonsils using >325 high-resolution molecular profiling assays for histone modifications, open chromatin (ChIP-, FAIRE-seq), transcriptome (RNA-seq), transcription factor (TF) binding, and genome copy number (microarrays). Findings From the resulting data, we identified gains in active chromatin in enhancers/super-enhancers that likely promote unchecked B-cell receptor signaling, including one we validated near the immunoglobulin superfamily receptors FCMR and PIGR. More striking and pervasive was the profound loss of key B-cell identity TFs, tumor suppressors and their super-enhancers, including EBF1, OCT2(POU2F2), and RUNX3. Using a novel approach to identify transcriptional feedback, we showed that these core transcriptional circuitries are self-regulating. Their selective gain and loss form a complex, iterative, and interactive process that likely curbs B-cell maturation and spurs proliferation. Interpretation Our study is the first to map the transcriptional circuitry of the most common blood cancers. We demonstrate that a critical subset of B-cell TFs and their cognate enhancers form self-regulatory transcriptional feedback loops whose disruption is a shared mechanism underlying these diverse subtypes of B-cell lymphoma. Funding National Institute of Health, Siteman Cancer Center, Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation, Doris Duke Foundation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23523964
Volume :
71
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EBioMedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....798cf69a122f5a61aa2804a0eae33151