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SETBP1 induces transcription of a network of development genes by acting as an epigenetic hub

Authors :
Alessandro Sessa
Luca Massimino
Marc Baumann
Fabio Stagno
Sara Redaelli
Francesco Onida
Francesco Passamonti
Emilio Usala
Delphine Rea
Leonardo Campiotti
Alicia Rubio
Alessandra Pirola
Vera Magistroni
Bruno Martino
Michele Merli
Vania Broccoli
Mario Mauri
Maciej Lalowski
Marco Peronaci
Marco Bregni
Rabah Soliymani
Alessandro Morotti
Rocco Piazza
Carlo Gambacorti-Passerini
Federica Banfi
Francesca Pavesi
Caterina Mezzatesta
Piazza, R
Magistroni, V
Redaelli, S
Mauri, M
Massimino, L
Sessa, A
Peronaci, M
Lalowski, M
Soliymani, R
Mezzatesta, C
Pirola, A
Banfi, F
Rubio, A
Rea, D
Stagno, F
Usala, E
Martino, B
Campiotti, L
Merli, M
Passamonti, F
Onida, F
Morotti, A
Pavesi, F
Bregni, M
Broccoli, V
Baumann, M
Gambacorti-Passerini, C
Medicum
Department of Biochemistry and Developmental Biology
University of Helsinki
Marc Baumann / Principal Investigator
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2018), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2018.

Abstract

SETBP1 variants occur as somatic mutations in several hematological malignancies such as atypical chronic myeloid leukemia and as de novo germline mutations in the Schinzel–Giedion syndrome. Here we show that SETBP1 binds to gDNA in AT-rich promoter regions, causing activation of gene expression through recruitment of a HCF1/KMT2A/PHF8 epigenetic complex. Deletion of two AT-hooks abrogates the binding of SETBP1 to gDNA and impairs target gene upregulation. Genes controlled by SETBP1 such as MECOM are significantly upregulated in leukemias containing SETBP1 mutations. Gene ontology analysis of deregulated SETBP1 target genes indicates that they are also key controllers of visceral organ development and brain morphogenesis. In line with these findings, in utero brain electroporation of mutated SETBP1 causes impairment of mouse neurogenesis with a profound delay in neuronal migration. In summary, this work unveils a SETBP1 function that directly affects gene transcription and clarifies the mechanism operating in myeloid malignancies and in the Schinzel–Giedion syndrome caused by SETBP1 mutations.<br />SETBP1 variants occur as somatic mutations in several malignancies and as de novo germline mutations in developmental disorders. Here the authors provide evidence that SETBP1 binds to gDNA in AT-rich promoter regions to promote target gene upregulation, indicating SETBP1 functions directly to regulate transcription.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e65d096c6ee81cee636c19700083929a