| Literature DB >> 26780610 |
Christopher C Oakes1, Marc Seifert2, Yassen Assenov1, Lei Gu3,4, Martina Przekopowitz2, Amy S Ruppert5, Qi Wang6,7, Charles D Imbusch6,7, Andrius Serva8, Sandra D Koser6,7, David Brocks1, Daniel B Lipka1, Olga Bogatyrova1, Dieter Weichenhan1, Benedikt Brors6,7, Laura Rassenti9, Thomas J Kipps9, Daniel Mertens10,11, Marc Zapatka8, Peter Lichter8, Hartmut Döhner11, Ralf Küppers2, Thorsten Zenz12,13, Stephan Stilgenbauer10, John C Byrd5, Christoph Plass1.
Abstract
Charting differences between tumors and normal tissue is a mainstay of cancer research. However, clonal tumor expansion from complex normal tissue architectures potentially obscures cancer-specific events, including divergent epigenetic patterns. Using whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of normal B cell subsets, we observed broad epigenetic programming of selective transcription factor binding sites coincident with the degree of B cell maturation. By comparing normal B cells to malignant B cells from 268 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), we showed that tumors derive largely from a continuum of maturation states reflected in normal developmental stages. Epigenetic maturation in CLL was associated with an indolent gene expression pattern and increasingly favorable clinical outcomes. We further uncovered that most previously reported tumor-specific methylation events are normally present in non-malignant B cells. Instead, we identified a potential pathogenic role for transcription factor dysregulation in CLL, where excess programming by EGR and NFAT with reduced EBF and AP-1 programming imbalances the normal B cell epigenetic program.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26780610 PMCID: PMC4963005 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330