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Systematic Epigenomic Analysis Reveals Chromatin States Associated with Melanoma Progression.

Authors :
Fiziev, Petko
Fiziev, Petko
Akdemir, Kadir C
Miller, John P
Keung, Emily Z
Samant, Neha S
Sharma, Sneha
Natale, Christopher A
Terranova, Christopher J
Maitituoheti, Mayinuer
Amin, Samirkumar B
Martinez-Ledesma, Emmanuel
Dhamdhere, Mayura
Axelrad, Jacob B
Shah, Amiksha
Cheng, Christine S
Mahadeshwar, Harshad
Seth, Sahil
Barton, Michelle C
Protopopov, Alexei
Tsai, Kenneth Y
Davies, Michael A
Garcia, Benjamin A
Amit, Ido
Chin, Lynda
Ernst, Jason
Rai, Kunal
Fiziev, Petko
Fiziev, Petko
Akdemir, Kadir C
Miller, John P
Keung, Emily Z
Samant, Neha S
Sharma, Sneha
Natale, Christopher A
Terranova, Christopher J
Maitituoheti, Mayinuer
Amin, Samirkumar B
Martinez-Ledesma, Emmanuel
Dhamdhere, Mayura
Axelrad, Jacob B
Shah, Amiksha
Cheng, Christine S
Mahadeshwar, Harshad
Seth, Sahil
Barton, Michelle C
Protopopov, Alexei
Tsai, Kenneth Y
Davies, Michael A
Garcia, Benjamin A
Amit, Ido
Chin, Lynda
Ernst, Jason
Rai, Kunal
Source :
Cell reports; vol 19, iss 4, 875-889; 2211-1247
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The extent and nature of epigenomic changes associated with melanoma progression is poorly understood. Through systematic epigenomic profiling of 35 epigenetic modifications and transcriptomic analysis, we define chromatin state changes associated with melanomagenesis by using a cell phenotypic model of non-tumorigenic and tumorigenic states. Computation of specific chromatin state transitions showed loss of histone acetylations and H3K4me2/3 on regulatory regions proximal to specific cancer-regulatory genes in important melanoma-driving cell signaling pathways. Importantly, such acetylation changes were also observed between benign nevi and malignant melanoma human tissues. Intriguingly, only a small fraction of chromatin state transitions correlated with expected changes in gene expression patterns. Restoration of acetylation levels on deacetylated loci by histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors selectively blocked excessive proliferation in tumorigenic cells and human melanoma cells, suggesting functional roles of observed chromatin state transitions in driving hyperproliferative phenotype. Through these results, we define functionally relevant chromatin states associated with melanoma progression.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Cell reports; vol 19, iss 4, 875-889; 2211-1247
Notes :
application/pdf, Cell reports vol 19, iss 4, 875-889 2211-1247
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391609485
Document Type :
Electronic Resource