| Literature DB >> 25369933 |
Yumi Yashiro-Ohtani1, Hongfang Wang2, Chongzhi Zang3, Kelly L Arnett4, Will Bailis1, Yugong Ho5, Birgit Knoechel6, Claudia Lanauze1, Lumena Louis1, Katherine S Forsyth1, Sujun Chen7, Yoonjie Chung1, Jonathan Schug5, Gerd A Blobel8, Stephen A Liebhaber5, Bradley E Bernstein9, Stephen C Blacklow10, Xiaole Shirley Liu3, Jon C Aster11, Warren S Pear12.
Abstract
Notch is needed for T-cell development and is a common oncogenic driver in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The protooncogene c-Myc (Myc) is a critical target of Notch in normal and malignant pre-T cells, but how Notch regulates Myc is unknown. Here, we identify a distal enhancer located >1 Mb 3' of human and murine Myc that binds Notch transcription complexes and physically interacts with the Myc proximal promoter. The Notch1 binding element in this region activates reporter genes in a Notch-dependent, cell-context-specific fashion that requires a conserved Notch complex binding site. Acute changes in Notch activation produce rapid changes in H3K27 acetylation across the entire enhancer (a region spanning >600 kb) that correlate with Myc expression. This broad Notch-influenced region comprises an enhancer region containing multiple domains, recognizable as discrete H3K27 acetylation peaks. Leukemia cells selected for resistance to Notch inhibitors express Myc despite epigenetic silencing of enhancer domains near the Notch transcription complex binding sites. Notch-independent expression of Myc in resistant cells is highly sensitive to inhibitors of bromodomain containing 4 (Brd4), a change in drug sensitivity that is accompanied by preferential association of the Myc promoter with more 3' enhancer domains that are strongly dependent on Brd4 for function. These findings indicate that altered long-range enhancer activity can mediate resistance to targeted therapies and provide a mechanistic rationale for combined targeting of Notch and Brd4 in leukemia.Entities:
Keywords: Brd4; chromatin; enhancer; gene regulation; transcription
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25369933 PMCID: PMC4246292 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1407079111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205