Literature DB >> 27738314

Loss of UHRF2 expression is associated with human neoplasia, promoter hypermethylation, decreased 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, and high proliferative activity.

Huarui Lu1, Sweta Bhoopatiraju1, Hongbo Wang1, Nolan P Schmitz1, Xiaohong Wang1, Matthew J Freeman1, Colleen L Forster2, Michael R Verneris1, Michael A Linden3, Timothy C Hallstrom1.   

Abstract

Ubiquitin-like with PHD and ring finger domains 2 (UHRF2) binds to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), a DNA base involved in tissue development, but it is unknown how their distribution compares with each other in normal and malignant human tissues. We used IHC on human tumor specimens (160 from 19 tumor types) or normal tissue to determine the expression and distribution of UHRF2, Ki-67, and 5hmC. We also examined UHRF2 expression in cord blood progenitors and compared its expression to methylation status in 6 leukemia cell lines and 15 primary human leukemias. UHRF2 is highly expressed, paralleling that of 5hmC, in most non-neoplastic, differentiated tissue with low Ki-67 defined proliferative activity. UHRF2 is expressed in common lymphoid progenitors and mature lymphocytes but not common myeloid progenitors or monocytes. In contrast, UHRF2 immunostaining in human cancer tissues revealed widespread reduction or abnormal cytoplasmic localization which correlated with a higher Ki-67 and reduced 5hmC. UHRF2 expression is reduced in some leukemia cell lines, this correlates with promoter hypermethylation, and similar UHRF2 methylation profiles are seen in primary human leukemia samples. Thus, UHRF2 and 5hmC are widely present in differentiated human tissues, and UHRF2 protein is poorly expressed or mislocalized in diverse human cancers.

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Keywords:  5-hydroxymethylcytosine; UHRF1; UHRF2; leukemia; ubiquitin-like with PHD and ring finger domains 2

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27738314      PMCID: PMC5340178          DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12583

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncotarget        ISSN: 1949-2553


INTRODUCTION

Epigenetic changes to DNA and histones control stem cell differentiation and the production of all types of the body's cells, and these processes often malfunction in human cancer. Methylation of cytosine (C) by DNA methyltransferase (DNMT) enzymes generates 5-methylcytosine (5mC) which is essential for transcriptional regulation and development. Cytosine methylation occurs most often at CpG dinucleotides, which form CpG islands (CGIs) when present together at very high density and which are often present in gene promoters. Methylation at CGIs is most often associated with gene silencing whereas demethylation of 5mC often leads to gene expression. 5mC marks can be converted to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) by the Ten-Eleven-translocation-2 (TET2) enzyme [1, 2]. This discovery has generated great interest because TET enzymes are frequently mutated in cancer, and the 5hmC mark is well documented as being lost in different cancer types relative to normal tissue [3, 4, 5, 6]. It is also becoming widely clear that 5hmC is involved in gene expression during tissue development [7, 8]. The UHRF2 protein was recently identified as having stronger binding affinity toward 5hmC than to C or 5mC, and independent biochemical analysis confirmed this finding [9, 10]. UHRF2 contains multiple domains, including a set- and ring- associated “SRA” domain that binds 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), and a C-terminal Ring domain with E3 ubiquitin ligase activity [11-13]. By contrast, the SRA domain of the highly similar UHRF1 protein preferentially binds hemi-methylated DNA during replication and recruits DNMT1 to conserve methylation in the daughter strand [14-17]. UHRF2 and 5hmC were recently shown to co-localize at DNA by ChIP-seq analysis [18]. UHRF2 is a potential tumor suppressor gene located within the 9p24 chromosomal region which is among the most frequent sites of DNA copy number lost in human cancer [19, 20]. UHRF2 was one of 100 “candidate cancer (CAN) genes” mutated in breast or colorectal cancer at a higher frequency than background mutation frequency [21, 22]. UHRF2 has also been recovered by different research groups from diverse sleeping-beauty mutagenesis screens wherein its deletion promotes liver, colon, nervous system tumors and notably colorectal cancers with severe disease [23-25]. UHRF2 also controls gene expression relating to epithelial-mesenchymal transition and promotes cell invasion [26]. To learn more about the link between UHRF2 and 5hmC co-expression, we performed IHC using antibodies to compare their expression across a variety of normal and malignant human tissues. These analyses have generated several conclusions. First, UHRF2 and 5hmC are widely present in terminally differentiated cells. Second, UHRF2 protein levels are significantly reduced or mislocalized in a wide variety of human cancers compared to normal tissue. Finally, the UHRF2 promoter is heavily methylated in several leukemia cell lines and this correlates with reduced expression and similar methylation is also observed in human leukemia samples.

RESULTS

We used immunohistochemistry (IHC) to examine the expression pattern of UHRF2 in a large number of different normal or malignant adult human tissues. We carefully validated the UHRF2 antibody for IHC using cell line FFPE blocks (Supplementary Figure S1) using cell lines that over- or under-express UHRF2. U2OS cells with wild-type UHRF2 stain strongly but the shUHRF2 cells do not. We also performed IHC on adjacently sectioned tissues with antibodies that recognize proliferating cells (Ki67) or the 5hmC base. This allowed us to determine if UHRF2 is expressed in differentiated and/or proliferating normal tissue and if it is expressed in or absent from Ki67 positive regions of tumor sections. The 5hmC antibody has been extensively validated for IHC use with formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissues [3, 4, 27, 28]. Normal tissue was arranged into tissue microarrays (TMAs) so that staining with anti-UHRF2 antibodies was conducted simultaneously on normal, and tumor tissues. We first evaluated UHRF2 expression patterns in normal human tissues. Results shown are representative of at least three individual tissue stainings. We evaluated the UHRF2 staining pattern in normal, non-neoplastic adult differentiated tissue from kidney, liver, lung, pancreas, and prostate (Figure 1). Serially sectioned tissue was also processed for IHC using antibodies to detect Ki67 and 5hmC. The UHRF2 protein was detectable by IHC in each of these differentiated tissues, although staining is weaker in the lung and prostate than in kidney, liver, and pancreas. UHRF2 is generally present in both the nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments of these tissues. These tissues were all negative for Ki67 staining, suggesting a low proliferative activity. In contrast, they were each strongly positive for 5hmC staining. Staining patterns from many other adult differentiated tissues are listed in Table 1 and shown in Supplementary Figure S2A & S2B. An identical staining profile (UHRF2+, Ki67−, 5hmc+) was observed for numerous other adult differentiated non-neoplastic tissues, such as epididymis, fallopian tube, gallbladder, skeletal muscle, parathyroid, salivary gland, seminal vesicle, and thyroid. Thus, terminally differentiated cells in many organs, some of which have previously been demonstrated to be Ki67−/5hmC+, are generally all also positive for UHRF2.
Figure 1

UHRF2 is expressed in differentiating cell populations

IHC for UHRF2, Ki67, and 5hmC was performed on normal human tissue from tonsil, oral mucosa, jejunum, testis, and uterus.

Table 1

List of UHRF2 in different cell types of adult human tissue

TissueFigureCell Type
Adrenal CortexSupplementary Figure S2AFasiculata
AppendixSupplementary Figure S3AGerminal center
Cervix (Uterine)Supplementary Figure S3BSquamous epithelial
ColonSupplementary Figure S3CDifferentiating villi
EpididymisSupplementary Figure S2ASome Principal & Basal
Esophageal MucosaSupplementary Figure S3BSquamous epithelial
Fallopian TubeSupplementary Figure S2ACiliated epithelial
Gall BladderSupplementary Figure S2AColumnar epithelial
IliumSupplementary Figure S3CDifferentiating villi
JejunumFigure 2Differentiating villi
KidneyFigure 1Distal/prox convoluted tubules
LiverFigure 1Hepatocytes
LungFigure 1Alveolar
Oral MucosaFigure 2Squamous epithelial
OvarySupplementary Figure S2BStroma and follicle
PancreasFigure 1Islets of Langerhans
ParathyroidSupplementary Figure S2BChief
PlacentaSupplementary Figure S2BDecidual, trophoblastic, Hofbauer
ProstateFigure 1Cuboidal epithelial
RectumSupplementary Figure S3CDifferentiating villi
Salivary GlandSupplementary Figure S2BInterlobular ductal cells
Seminal VesicleSupplementary Figure S2BColumnar epithelial & Lamina propria
Skeletal MuscleSupplementary Figure S2AMyocytes
SkinSupplementary Figure S3BSquamous epithelial
SpleenSupplementary Figure S3AGerminal center
StomachSupplementary Figure S3CDifferentiating villi
TestisFigure 2Spermatogonia, Spermatocytes, Sertoli
ThyroidSupplementary Figure S2BFolicular & Cuboidal epithelial
TonsilFigure 2Germinal center
Uterus - EndometrialFigure 2Glandular epithelial
VaginaSupplementary Figure S3BSquamous epithelial

All tissues examined by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67 and 5hmC are listed, and the UHRF2 positive cell types are listed.

UHRF2 is expressed in differentiating cell populations

IHC for UHRF2, Ki67, and 5hmC was performed on normal human tissue from tonsil, oral mucosa, jejunum, testis, and uterus. All tissues examined by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67 and 5hmC are listed, and the UHRF2 positive cell types are listed. Our staining of numerous different adult tissues also included several which contained Ki67+ progenitor cells in the process of differentiating. For example, UHRF2 strongly stained the germinal centers (GCs) of peripheral lymphoid organs including the tonsil (Figure 2), appendix and spleen (Supplementary Figure S3A). In contrast to adult differentiated tissues, which were all UHRF2+, Ki67−, 5hmC+, UHRF2 positive GCs were strongly Ki67 positive and 5hmC negative. The loss of 5hmC in GCs profile has been documented [29-31]. Intriguingly, the promoter region of the UHRF2 gene transitions from highly methylated in naïve B-lymphocytes to unmethylated in B-lymphocytes undergoing the GC reaction, consistent with the expression pattern we observe and suggestive of a potential role of UHRF2 in differentiating B-lymphocytes [32]. It also indicates that UHRF2 expression is not limited to terminally differentiated cells. We also observed UHRF2 expression in basal and suprabasal squamous epithelial cells of the oral mucosa (Figure 2), esophageal mucosa, skin, cervix and vagina (Table 1 and Supplementary Figure S3B). UHRF2 and 5hmC clearly stained Ki67 negative cells of the basal layer. Cells of the suprabasal layer were both UHRF2 positive and negative, and generally displayed strong nuclear localization of UHRF2 unlike the terminally differentiated cells which typically showed both nuclear and cytoplasmic localization. Most of these cells retained 5hmC in the suprabasal layer. The GI tract is a classical model of tissue differentiation where progenitor cells in the crypt produce differentiated cells of the villi. UHRF2 is present in both the proliferating and differentiated cells of the jejunum (Figure 2), colon, ileum, lower stomach, and rectum (Table 1 and Supplementary Figure S3C). In each of these tissue, Ki67 and 5hmC staining is mutually exclusive, with progenitor cells in the crypt (Ki67+/5hmC−) producing differentiated cells of the villi (Ki67−/5hmC+) [3, 31]. IHC staining of testis revealed spermatogonia with Ki67− nuclei that stained positive for UHRF2 and 5hmC. Differentiating spermatids displayed evidence of loss of 5hmC staining, acquisition of Ki67+ staining and retention of nuclear UHRF2 staining (Figure 2D). UHRF2 also strongly stained endometrial glandular cells in the uterus, which contained Ki67 or 5hmC positive admixed cells (Figure 2E).
Figure 2

UHRF2 and 5hmC are hallmarks of terminally differentiated cells

Adult human tissue from kidney, liver, lung, pancreas and prostate were analyzed by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67 and 5hmC levels.

UHRF2 and 5hmC are hallmarks of terminally differentiated cells

Adult human tissue from kidney, liver, lung, pancreas and prostate were analyzed by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67 and 5hmC levels. Having established the expression pattern of UHRF2 across numerous normal human tissues, we asked if and how the UHRF2 expression pattern is altered in human tumors originating from some of these tissues. In total, we examined 160 specimens derived from 19 different tumor types organized in tissue microarrays. This staining of tumor sample TMAs was conducted simultaneously with staining of normal tissue TMAs to reduce the likelihood of batch or slide variations in staining. This broad analysis revealed three main themes that describe the staining pattern of UHRF2 across a variety of human tumors. Some tumors retain similar expression and localization of UHRF2 compared to matching normal tissues. Second, UHRF2 appears abnormally localized to the cytoplasm but excluded from the nucleus in a subset of human tumors. Finally, UHRF2 frequently displays a significant reduction in expression in diverse tumor types. We show representative examples of each category from gastric, hepatocellular and testicular cancers. UHRF2 expression was observed in the nucleus and cytoplasm of both proliferating and differentiating epithelial cells in the GI tract villi. Gastric tumors typically arise from these epithelial cells, and in some cases these tumors retain strong UHRF2 staining that is comparable to normal tissue (Figure 3A). We observed that gastric tumors also often display altered localization of UHRF2 predominantly in the cytoplasm but not the nucleus (Figure 3B). Similar staining was observed in some colorectal tumors in this study (Supplementary Figure S4A) and by Lu et al., who also reported cytoplasmic staining of UHRF2 in a large cohort of human colorectal tumors [33]. These gastric tumor cells were strongly Ki67 positive, and cells from the same region in serially sectioned tissue were notably lacking 5hmC staining. A final subset of gastric tumors displays a significant reduction in UHRF2 staining (Figure 3C). These tumors with reduced UHRF2 expression were highly Ki67+ and 5hmC−. We assessed UHRF2 staining across a sampling of hepatic cholangiocarcinomas, which arise from biliary ductular epithelial cells. Some of these tumors retained moderate levels of UHRF2 (Figure 3D). Another subset of these cancers showed a significant increase in cytoplasmic localization of UHRF2 (Figure 3E). A final fraction of cholangiocarcinomas showed sharply reduced levels of UHRF2 (Figure 3F). Testicular cancer is thought to arise from germ cells, and these cells displayed strong nuclear UHRF2 staining in normal tissue. We show an example of a highly proliferative, 5hmCtestis cancer where UHRF2 levels are observed at moderate levels primarily in the nucleus (Supplementary Figure S4A). A second, unusual example, shows strong UHRF2 staining in a perinuclear pattern in cells that are generally Ki67+ and 5hmC−. Lastly, UHRF2 protein levels are also reduced in a highly Ki67+ testis cancer.
Figure 3

UHRF2 protein levels are mislocalized or reduced compared to normal tissue in gastric and hepatocellular human tumors

Human cancer tissue was analyzed by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67, and 5hmC and displayed as representative micrographs.

UHRF2 protein levels are mislocalized or reduced compared to normal tissue in gastric and hepatocellular human tumors

Human cancer tissue was analyzed by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67, and 5hmC and displayed as representative micrographs. We sought to determine if loss of UHRF2 expression was a recurring theme in other human tumor types. We show examples of significant reduction in UHRF2 staining in pancreatic, lymphoma, cervical, endometrial, squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and head & neck human tumors (Figure 4). UHRF2 staining was assessed in regions that were highly proliferative in serially sectioned tissue. Highly proliferative regions (Ki67+) almost always display reduced 5hmC levels by IHC staining, as seen previously in studies using human tumor samples. Occasional exceptions to this rule were noted. For example, staining of a testis cancer and a lung SCC (Supplementary Figure S4A) each contained >90% cells staining positive for Ki67 and 5hmC.
Figure 4

UHRF2 protein levels are reduced across numerous different human tumor types

Human cancer tissue was analyzed by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67, and 5hmC and displayed as representative micrographs.

UHRF2 protein levels are reduced across numerous different human tumor types

Human cancer tissue was analyzed by IHC for UHRF2, Ki67, and 5hmC and displayed as representative micrographs. This analyses documented UHRF2 expression across a variety of normal and tumor solid tissues, but had not assessed the presence of UHRF2 in normal or malignant hematological cells, so we assessed relative levels of UHRF2 in hematopoietic stem cells, progenitors or differentiated cells. First, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), multipotent progenitors (MPPs), common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs), and common myeloid progenitors (CMPs) were separated by fluorescent activated cell sorting (FACS) from human umbilical cord blood. RNA was isolated and quantified, and qPCR was used to measure UHRF2 mRNA levels normalized to GAPDH (Figure 5). We found that UHRF2 levels were lowest in HSCs and remained comparably low in MPPs and CMPs. Surprisingly, UHRF2 mRNA was elevated around 8-fold in CLPs compared to HSCs. Next, mature lymphocyte populations were isolated from human blood and protein analyzed by immunoblotting. We observed comparable expression of UHRF2 in isolated B- and T-lymphocytes. UHRF2 levels are reduced but still present in CD56+ natural killer cells. We were unable to detect UHRF2 in CD14+ monocytes. Thus, UHRF2 appears to be predominantly expressed in mature cells of lymphoid origin and in CLPs, but not in the more undifferentiated HSCs or MPPs, or in cells of the myeloid lineage (CMPs, monocytes).
Figure 5

UHRF2 is expressed in human common lymphoid progenitors and mature B- and T- lymphocytes, and its mRNA and protein levels are substantially reduced in several human leukemia and lymphoma cells lines

A. UHRF2 mRNA expression is increased in human common lymphoid progenitors (CLP) relative to hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), multipotent progenitors (MPP) and common myeloid progenitors (CMP). (n=3) B. UHRF2 protein is present in human B, T, and NK cells but missing from monocytes. C. UHRF2 mRNA expression is decreased in Jurkat (T-cell leukemia), K562 (lymphoblasts) and RAJI (Burkitt's lymphoma) but intact in the pro-B and pre-B cell lines RS4:11, SEMK2, and NALM6. D. UHRF2 protein is absent in Jurkat, K562, and RAJI cell lines but present in RS4:11, SEMK2, and NALM6. See band reduced from U2OS cells containing shUHRF2 vs control. *, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01. Error bars represent standard deviation from the mean.

UHRF2 is expressed in human common lymphoid progenitors and mature B- and T- lymphocytes, and its mRNA and protein levels are substantially reduced in several human leukemia and lymphoma cells lines

A. UHRF2 mRNA expression is increased in human common lymphoid progenitors (CLP) relative to hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), multipotent progenitors (MPP) and common myeloid progenitors (CMP). (n=3) B. UHRF2 protein is present in human B, T, and NK cells but missing from monocytes. C. UHRF2 mRNA expression is decreased in Jurkat (T-cell leukemia), K562 (lymphoblasts) and RAJI (Burkitt's lymphoma) but intact in the pro-B and pre-B cell lines RS4:11, SEMK2, and NALM6. D. UHRF2 protein is absent in Jurkat, K562, and RAJI cell lines but present in RS4:11, SEMK2, and NALM6. See band reduced from U2OS cells containing shUHRF2 vs control. *, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01. Error bars represent standard deviation from the mean. Our previous analysis of UHRF2 expression in normal vs. cancer tissue indicated that its levels are decreased in a wide variety of human tumor types. To determine if UHRF2 is also decreased in hematopoietic cancer cells, we analyzed UHRF2 mRNA and protein expression pattern across six different leukemia or lymphoma cell lines. mRNA was isolated from Jurkat (T-lymphoblastic leukemia), K562 (lymphoblasts), RAJI (Burkitt lymphoma), RS4:11 & SEMK2 (t(4;11)-positive precursor B-lymphoblastic leukemia), and NALM6 (B-lymphoblastic leukemia) cells and qPCR was utilized to compare UHRF2 levels across these cell lines relative to the internal control GAPDH. We found that levels of UHRF2 mRNA were comparably high in the RS4:11, SEMK2, and NALM6 cell lines but greatly reduced in Jurkat, K562 and RAJI cell lines. We saw a corresponding relationship between mRNA and protein levels from these cell lines, with Jurkat, K562 and RAJI cells not expressing UHRF2, and the RS4:11, SEMK2, and NALM6 lines highly expressing UHRF2 protein. UHRF2 protein was also reduced in U2OS cells stably integrated with an shRNA against UHRF2, which we have previously described [34]. These findings indicate that just as for human solid tumors, UHRF2 expression is severely reduced in some hematopoietic malignancies. Hypermethylation of CGIs in the promoter regions of genes is a frequent cause of tumor suppressor inactivation in human cancer. The UHRF2 promoter contains a 1744 nucleotide region predicted to be a CpG island (65.7% GC, 0.95 CpG observed [Obs]/global expected [Exp]) compared to the classic definition of a CpG island (GC > 50%, Obs/Exp > 0.6). We thought that differential hypermethylation of the UHRF2 promoter might reasonably explain its reduced levels in human solid and hematological malignancies. We tested this directly by measuring CpG methylation of the UHRF2 promoter from bisulfite-treated genomic DNA isolated from two cell lines that express UHRF2 (SEMK2 & NALM6) and two that don't (K562 and RAJI). We observed significant CpGs methylation of in the promoters of K562 and RAJI, compared to almost none in the SEMK2 and NALM6 cell lines (Figure 6A). Closer inspection of K562 and RAJI CpG methylation revealed two distinct regions of the promoter with different levels of methylation between these lines. One region, arbitrarily named “A” was almost fully methylated in both K562 and RAJI cell lines. A second region termed “B”, which spanned three PCR amplification regions, was almost 100% methylated in K562 but the proportion of CpG methylation dropped to around 50% across this region in RAJI cells. A final region named “C” was unmethylated in each of the lines. Thus, loss of UHRF2 expression can be tied to promoter hypermethylation of CpGs in a leukemia and lymphoma cell line. The % CpG methylation was calculated for each region and cell line and displayed in Figure 6B.
Figure 6

The UHRF2 promoter is significantly methylated in non-expressing cell lines

A. Human UHRF2 genomic locus and CpGs analyzed by bisulfite sequencing. Bisulfite sequencing results of individual amplicons are represented by rows of circles. Solid circles represent methylated CpGs and open circles denote unmethylated CpGs. B. Methylation status of UHRF2 promoter in hematopoietic cancer cell lines. The percent of CpGs methylated in regions “A”, “B”, and “C” were quantified and graphed. Error bars represent standard deviation from the mean.

The UHRF2 promoter is significantly methylated in non-expressing cell lines

A. Human UHRF2 genomic locus and CpGs analyzed by bisulfite sequencing. Bisulfite sequencing results of individual amplicons are represented by rows of circles. Solid circles represent methylated CpGs and open circles denote unmethylated CpGs. B. Methylation status of UHRF2 promoter in hematopoietic cancer cell lines. The percent of CpGs methylated in regions “A”, “B”, and “C” were quantified and graphed. Error bars represent standard deviation from the mean. We examined methylation of UHRF2 in primary human leukemia cells to determine the cancer relevance of these findings. We obtained 5 B-cell ALLs, 5 T-cell ALLs, and 5 AMLs with high blast counts (>80%) and analyzed the genomic DNA by bisulfite sequencing. We used the primer set specific to the most 5′ region of the CpG island, which seemed to provide the best correlation to protein expression in the cell line analysis. Each of the different tumor types displayed a unique UHRF2 methylation pattern (Figure 7A). Three of the B-cell ALLs were methylated around 25% in this region, with another showing no methylation, and a final sample at 54% (Figure 7B). All of the T-cell ALLs were methylated across this region, averaging around 65%, and thus generally much more methylated than the B-cell ALLs. Of the AML samples, three closely resembled the 65% methylation pattern of the T-cell ALLs. The remaining two samples had less than 5% methylation. These finding indicate that the UHRF2 promoter is fairly heavily methylated in some cancer types but is greatly reduced in other types or individual cases.
Figure 7

Variable UHRF2 methylation patterns in human leukemias

A. Bisulfite sequencing of DNA from human ALL-B cell (5), ALL-T cell (5) and AML (5). Individual CpGs are represented by solid circles (methylated) or open (unmethylated). B. The percent of CpGs methylated across this region were quantified and graphed.

Variable UHRF2 methylation patterns in human leukemias

A. Bisulfite sequencing of DNA from human ALL-B cell (5), ALL-T cell (5) and AML (5). Individual CpGs are represented by solid circles (methylated) or open (unmethylated). B. The percent of CpGs methylated across this region were quantified and graphed. We next determined if methylation patterns in the UHRF2 promoter correlated with protein expression levels in these samples. To do this, the remainder of the tumor samples were split into portions for anti-UHRF2 cell staining on slides (Figure 8A), for protein immunoblotting (8B), and mRNA analysis of UHRF2 levels by qPCR (8C). Anti-UHRF2 IHC staining of cells centrifuged onto slides was validated using cell lines that express high levels (SEMK2) or low levels (K562) of UHRF2 (Supplementary Figure S5). One of the ALL-B cell leukemias stainings lost cells on the slide and was not stained. The other 4 all stained positive for UHRF2 and apparent localization at heterochromatic foci as has been described [11, 12]. All 5 ALL-B cell leukemias expressed UHRF2 by immunoblotting, indicating a good agreement with the cytospin staining. Likewise, UHRF2 mRNA was high in each of these sample compared to levels in the SEMK2 cell line. These findings indicate that this region of the UHRF2 CpG island is poorly methylated in 4/5 ALL-B cell leukemias and this correlates with higher UHRF2 mRNA and protein levels. Among the ALL-T cell leukemias, which all were strongly methylated in this region, 2 of the 5 showed a reduction in UHRF2 protein levels by IHC and immunoblotting. However, the other samples still expressed UHRF2 protein and mRNA in spite of this region of the CpG island being hypermethylated. Similarly, AML samples were either fully methylated (3/5) or unmethylated (2/5). Of the 3 fully methylated, 2 still showed UHRF2 protein and mRNA expression. Of the 2 unmethylated, 1 showed strong UHRF2 protein and mRNA expression. These findings indicate that methylation of this region is alone insufficient to block UHRF2 expression.
Figure 8

UHRF2 expression is altered in human leukemias

The remaining cells were split for UHRF2 expression analysis. A. Tumor cells were centrifuged onto slides, fixed, and analyzed by IHC for UHRF2 (1:2000). B. Proteins from tumor cell lysates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted for UHRF2 and ACTIN. C. UHRF2 mRNA levels in tumor cells assessed by qPCR.

UHRF2 expression is altered in human leukemias

The remaining cells were split for UHRF2 expression analysis. A. Tumor cells were centrifuged onto slides, fixed, and analyzed by IHC for UHRF2 (1:2000). B. Proteins from tumor cell lysates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted for UHRF2 and ACTIN. C. UHRF2 mRNA levels in tumor cells assessed by qPCR.

DISCUSSION

UHRF2 is the most closely related and structurally similar homolog of UHRF1, and both share some overlapping and unique characteristics [12, 13]. UHRF1 protein binds to hemi-methylated DNA during replication and recruits DNMT1 to copy the methyl pattern to the daughter strand [15-17]. Whereas the UHRF1 SRA domain shows strongest preference for hemi-methylated DNA, the SRA domain in UHRF2 show strongest biochemical affinity toward fully 5-hydroxymethylated cytosine [9, 10]. UHRF1 and UHRF2 also differ significantly in their expression patterns. UHRF1 is highly expressed in proliferating embryonic stem cells (HSCs) and a wide variety of proliferating cancer cells, but not in differentiated mature populations. In contrast, UHRF2 is not expressed in ESCs but its mRNA expression rises as ESC differentiate [12, 35]. Our results indicate that UHRF2 protein levels are widely lost in human cancer, with significant protein level reductions occurring in gastric, liver, pancreatic, lymphoma, cervical, endometrial, squamous cell carcinoma, and head and neck cancers. In gastric and liver cancers, UHRF2 appears to be preferentially localized to the cytoplasm in a subset of these tumors. A similar staining profile was observed by Lu and colleagues, who analyzed UHRF2 staining in a large cohort of primary colorectal tumors [33]. They observed low UHRF2 levels in 34% of tumors, and strong UHRF2 staining in 37% of tumors, with the majority of UHRF2 localized to the cytoplasm in the strong staining tumors. The functional significance or function of cytoplasmic localized UHRF2, or what signaling events cause it to be excluded from the nucleus is unknown. However, the highly similar UHRF1 is also present in the nucleus and cytoplasm and its phosphorylation by CCNA2/CDK2 during S-phase promotes its cytoplasmic localization, and mutating the phosphor-acceptor site leads to UHRF1 nuclear accumulation [36]. Thus, altered cell cycle signaling in certain tumors may induce the cytoplasmic localization of UHRF2. UHRF2 is altered in human tumors through a variety of mechanisms. The first, although rare, is through direct mutation in its coding sequence [21, 22]. Second, UHRF2 is located at 9p24 and is subject to DNA copy number loss in human brain, breast, gastric, kidney, hematopoietic, and lung tumors [20]. It is also overexpressed at the mRNA levels in lung adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas compared to normal tissue, although not as highly as UHRF1 or DNMTs [37]. Third, UHRF2 promoter is hypermethylated in cancer. Varley and colleagues analyzed promoter methylation of each of the 100 “CAN” genes identified as mutated in breast and colon cancer and found that UHRF2 was one of only 5 genes that was methylated in both tumor types but not normal matched tissue [38]. Our results have extended these findings by demonstrating that expression of UHRF2 mRNA is lost in cell lines with hypermethylated UHRF2. We also observe UHRF2 methylation patterns that are distinct for human T- ALL, B-ALL, and AMLs. We were unable to definitively tie methylation status of UHRF2 to its expression in human leukemia samples. However, it is important to point out that standard bisulfite sequence does not discriminate mC from hmC. Thus it is possible that our tumor samples with high UHRF2 expression have hydryxomethylated promoters which might cause increased gene expression even though they were detected as hypermethylated. Together, these findings indicate that UHRF2 and 5hmC are widely present in differentiated human tissues, and UHRF2 protein is poorly expressed or mislocalized in diverse human cancers.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

TMA construction & immunohistochemistry

TMAs were constructed from normal and neoplastic tissues collected at the University of Minnesota Medical Center. IHC was performed as previously described [39]. Briefly, detection was through primary antibodies against UHRF2 (Sigma HPA026697/HPA026633) (1:200), 5hmC (Active Motif F3165) (1:5000), & Ki-67 (SP6) (Biocare Medical, Cat# CRM325), with Vector biotinylated secondary (1:250), tertiary was streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase (Covance #SIG-32000) and chromagen 3, 3′-diaminobenzidine substrate (Covance #SIG-31043). Micrographs were taken at 400x magnification, except where noted.

Cell culture, RNA isolation, real-time PCR, and protein immunoblotting

Cells were cultured as previously described [40]. RNA was isolated and quantitative PCR performed as described [41]. Immunoblotting was performed as described [42]. Antiserum against UHRF2 for immunoblotting was purchased from Sigma (HPA026633).

Mature lymphocyte isolation

For T, B, NK and monocyte isolation, peripheral blood was obtained from healthy donors and red blood cells and granulocytes were removed by Ficoll density centrifugation. Mononuclear cells were isolated and subjected to magnetic bead separation using T, B, NK or monocyte isolation kits (#130-050-101, 130-092-657, 130-050-301, 130-050-201) according to the manufactures specifications (Miltenyi Biotech, Auburn, CA). Samples were >85% pure by FACS analysis.

Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell isolation

Umbilical cord blood mononuclear cells were isolated using Ficoll density centrifugation. CD34+ cells were isolated using magnetic bead selection according to the manufactures specification (#130-046-702, Miltenyi Biotech, Auburn, CA). Isolated cells were further purified using FACS sorting (FACS Aria I) into the following populations: HSC (CD34+CD38-CD90+CD45RA-), MPP (CD34+CD38-CD90-CD45RA-), CMP (CD34+CD38+CD135+CD45RA-) and CLP (CD34+CD10+). Purified cells were resuspended in RLT buffer for RNA isolation.

Leukemia tumor sample analysis

5 cases each of human B-cell ALL, T-cell ALL, and AML (blast count > 75%) were obtained from the University of Minnesota Leukemia MDS Tissue Bank (IRB# 1603R86027). For cytospin analysis, 20,000 cells were spun onto a slide (10 min/1000 rpm) using a Shandon Cytospin 3 centrifuge. Cells were fixed with 10% formalin for 20 minutes at room temperature, washed three times with PBS before analyzing by IHC using anti-UHRF2 antisera (1:2000).

Bisulfite DNA conversion and sequencing method

Genomic DNA was isolated from cell lines using QIAamp DNA Mini kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's manual. Bisulfite conversion was performed using the EpiTect Fast DNA Bisulfite kit (Qiagen) following manufacturer's protocol. DNA Single-step PCR amplification was conducted using Accuprime supermix II (Invitrogen). Primers were designed to specifically amplify converted DNA using the publicly available EpiDesigner BETA (http://www.epidesigner.com) and amplification products were visualized by agarose gel electrophoresis and appropriate bands were purified by using QIAquick Gel Extraction kit (Qiagen). Purified products were cloned into Topo TA vector for sequencing. Alignment and methylation analysis were performed using the online QUMA program (http://quma.cdb.riken.jp). Primers for bisulfite: set1: left: GATTTTTTAGTT GTAGTAGGGAAGGA, right: ACAACTCCAAACCTA TCCTCAAAC; set2: left: GGTTTGAGGATAGGTTT GGAGTT, right:AATTCTTTAATCTCAAAAACACACCA; set3:left:TGGTGTGTTTTTGAGATTAAAGAATTA, right:AAAACTAAAACTCCCACATAAAAATC; set4: left:TGATTTTTATGTGGGAGTTTTAGTTTT, right:CCCTTTATCTCCCCCTAAACTCTA
  42 in total

1.  The consensus coding sequences of human breast and colorectal cancers.

Authors:  Tobias Sjöblom; Siân Jones; Laura D Wood; D Williams Parsons; Jimmy Lin; Thomas D Barber; Diana Mandelker; Rebecca J Leary; Janine Ptak; Natalie Silliman; Steve Szabo; Phillip Buckhaults; Christopher Farrell; Paul Meeh; Sanford D Markowitz; Joseph Willis; Dawn Dawson; James K V Willson; Adi F Gazdar; James Hartigan; Leo Wu; Changsheng Liu; Giovanni Parmigiani; Ben Ho Park; Kurtis E Bachman; Nickolas Papadopoulos; Bert Vogelstein; Kenneth W Kinzler; Victor E Velculescu
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-09-07       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Structural basis for hydroxymethylcytosine recognition by the SRA domain of UHRF2.

Authors:  Ting Zhou; Jun Xiong; Mingzhu Wang; Na Yang; Jiemin Wong; Bing Zhu; Rui-Ming Xu
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2014-05-08       Impact factor: 17.970

Review 3.  DNA methylation and methylcytosine oxidation in cell fate decisions.

Authors:  Kian Peng Koh; Anjana Rao
Journal:  Curr Opin Cell Biol       Date:  2013-03-14       Impact factor: 8.382

4.  Ubiquitin-like with PHD and ring finger domains 2 is a predictor of survival and a potential therapeutic target in colon cancer.

Authors:  Su Lu; Dongwang Yan; Zehua Wu; Tao Jiang; Jian Chen; Lin Yuan; Jun Lin; Zhihai Peng; Huamei Tang
Journal:  Oncol Rep       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 3.906

Review 5.  DNA methylation and hydroxymethylation in hematologic differentiation and transformation.

Authors:  Myunggon Ko; Jungeun An; Anjana Rao
Journal:  Curr Opin Cell Biol       Date:  2015-11-18       Impact factor: 8.382

6.  Distinct global DNA methylation status in B-cell lymphomas: immunohistochemical study of 5-methylcytosine and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine.

Authors:  Ikuo Matsuda; Yukihiro Imai; Seiichi Hirota
Journal:  J Clin Exp Hematop       Date:  2014

7.  Recognition of hemi-methylated DNA by the SRA protein UHRF1 by a base-flipping mechanism.

Authors:  Kyohei Arita; Mariko Ariyoshi; Hidehito Tochio; Yusuke Nakamura; Masahiro Shirakawa
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-09-03       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  The genomic landscapes of human breast and colorectal cancers.

Authors:  Laura D Wood; D Williams Parsons; Siân Jones; Jimmy Lin; Tobias Sjöblom; Rebecca J Leary; Dong Shen; Simina M Boca; Thomas Barber; Janine Ptak; Natalie Silliman; Steve Szabo; Zoltan Dezso; Vadim Ustyanksky; Tatiana Nikolskaya; Yuri Nikolsky; Rachel Karchin; Paul A Wilson; Joshua S Kaminker; Zemin Zhang; Randal Croshaw; Joseph Willis; Dawn Dawson; Michail Shipitsin; James K V Willson; Saraswati Sukumar; Kornelia Polyak; Ben Ho Park; Charit L Pethiyagoda; P V Krishna Pant; Dennis G Ballinger; Andrew B Sparks; James Hartigan; Douglas R Smith; Erick Suh; Nickolas Papadopoulos; Phillip Buckhaults; Sanford D Markowitz; Giovanni Parmigiani; Kenneth W Kinzler; Victor E Velculescu; Bert Vogelstein
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-10-11       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  Transposon mutagenesis identifies genes driving hepatocellular carcinoma in a chronic hepatitis B mouse model.

Authors:  Nancy A Jenkins; Neal G Copeland; Emilie A Bard-Chapeau; Anh-Tuan Nguyen; Alistair G Rust; Ahmed Sayadi; Philip Lee; Belinda Q Chua; Lee-Sun New; Johann de Jong; Jerrold M Ward; Christopher Ky Chin; Valerie Chew; Han Chong Toh; Jean-Pierre Abastado; Touati Benoukraf; Richie Soong; Frederic A Bard; Adam J Dupuy; Randy L Johnson; George K Radda; Eric Cy Chan; Lodewyk Fa Wessels; David J Adams
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2013-12-08       Impact factor: 38.330

10.  Global 5-hydroxymethylcytosine content is significantly reduced in tissue stem/progenitor cell compartments and in human cancers.

Authors:  Michael C Haffner; Alcides Chaux; Alan K Meeker; David M Esopi; Jonathan Gerber; Laxmi G Pellakuru; Antoun Toubaji; Pedram Argani; Christine Iacobuzio-Donahue; William G Nelson; George J Netto; Angelo M De Marzo; Srinivasan Yegnasubramanian
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2011-08
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  8 in total

1.  HBx promotes hepatocarcinogenesis by enhancing phosphorylation and blocking ubiquitinylation of UHRF2.

Authors:  Fengjuan Cheng; Guanhua Qian; Xianyun Fang; Jingjie Sun; Siyuan Chen; Rongjuan Chen; Shangjing Liu; Zhaodi Li; Kejia Wu; Shiming Jiang; Yong Chen; Ni Tang; Juan Chen; Changzhu Duan
Journal:  Hepatol Int       Date:  2021-04-19       Impact factor: 6.047

Review 2.  Dietary Modulation of the Epigenome.

Authors:  Folami Y Ideraabdullah; Steven H Zeisel
Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2018-04-01       Impact factor: 37.312

3.  UHRF2 regulates cell cycle, epigenetics and gene expression to control the timing of retinal progenitor and ganglion cell differentiation.

Authors:  Xiaohong Wang; Aaron L Sarver; Qiyuan Han; Christopher L Seiler; Chencheng Xie; Huarui Lu; Colleen L Forster; Natalia Y Tretyakova; Timothy C Hallstrom
Journal:  Development       Date:  2022-03-14       Impact factor: 6.862

4.  Retinoblastoma cells activate the AKT pathway and are vulnerable to the PI3K/mTOR inhibitor NVP-BEZ235.

Authors:  Chencheng Xie; Matthew J Freeman; Huarui Lu; Xiaohong Wang; Colleen L Forster; Aaron L Sarver; Timothy C Hallstrom
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-06-13

5.  Loss of UHRF2 Is Associated With Non-small Cell Lung Carcinoma Progression.

Authors:  Chun Jin; Dian Xiong; Hao-Ran Li; Jia-Hao Jiang; Jian-Chao Qi; Jian-Yong Ding
Journal:  J Cancer       Date:  2018-07-30       Impact factor: 4.207

6.  Novel UHRF1-MYC Axis in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

Authors:  Soyoung Park; Ali H Abdel Sater; Johannes F Fahrmann; Ehsan Irajizad; Yining Cai; Hiroyuki Katayama; Jody Vykoukal; Makoto Kobayashi; Jennifer B Dennison; Guillermo Garcia-Manero; Charles G Mullighan; Zhaohui Gu; Marina Konopleva; Samir Hanash
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-31       Impact factor: 6.575

7.  Redefining germline predisposition in children with molecularly characterized ependymoma: a population-based 20-year cohort.

Authors:  Jon Foss-Skiftesvik; Ulrik Kristoffer Stoltze; Karin Wadt; René Mathiasen; Thomas van Overeem Hansen; Lise Barlebo Ahlborn; Erik Sørensen; Sisse Rye Ostrowski; Solvej Margrete Aldringer Kullegaard; Adrian Otamendi Laspiur; Linea Cecilie Melchior; David Scheie; Bjarne Winther Kristensen; Jane Skjøth-Rasmussen; Kjeld Schmiegelow
Journal:  Acta Neuropathol Commun       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 7.578

Review 8.  Targeting the SET and RING-associated (SRA) domain of ubiquitin-like, PHD and ring finger-containing 1 (UHRF1) for anti-cancer drug development.

Authors:  Debasis Patnaik; Pierre-Olivier Estève; Sriharsa Pradhan
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2018-05-25
  8 in total

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