| Literature DB >> 30274972 |
Pilar M Dominguez1, Hussein Ghamlouch2, Wojciech Rosikiewicz3, Parveen Kumar3, Wendy Béguelin1, Lorena Fontán1, Martín A Rivas1, Patrycja Pawlikowska4, Marine Armand2,4, Enguerran Mouly2, Miguel Torres-Martin5, Ashley S Doane1,6, María T Calvo Fernandez1, Matt Durant1, Veronique Della-Valle2, Matt Teater1,6, Luisa Cimmino7, Nathalie Droin2, Saber Tadros8, Samaneh Motanagh9, Alan H Shih10, Mark A Rubin9, Wayne Tam11, Iannis Aifantis7, Ross L Levine10, Olivier Elemento6, Giorgio Inghirami11, Michael R Green8, Maria E Figueroa5, Olivier A Bernard12, Said Aoufouchi13, Sheng Li14,15,16, Rita Shaknovich17,18, Ari M Melnick17.
Abstract
TET2 somatic mutations occur in ∼10% of diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) but are of unknown significance. Herein, we show that TET2 is required for the humoral immune response and is a DLBCL tumor suppressor. TET2 loss of function disrupts transit of B cells through germinal centers (GC), causing GC hyperplasia, impaired class switch recombination, blockade of plasma cell differentiation, and a preneoplastic phenotype. TET2 loss was linked to focal loss of enhancer hydroxymethylation and transcriptional repression of genes that mediate GC exit, such as PRDM1. Notably, these enhancers and genes are also repressed in CREBBP-mutant DLBCLs. Accordingly, TET2 mutation in patients yields a CREBBP-mutant gene-expression signature, CREBBP and TET2 mutations are generally mutually exclusive, and hydroxymethylation loss caused by TET2 deficiency impairs enhancer H3K27 acetylation. Hence, TET2 plays a critical role in the GC reaction, and its loss of function results in lymphomagenesis through failure to activate genes linked to GC exit signals. SIGNIFICANCE: We show that TET2 is required for exit of the GC, B-cell differentiation, and is a tumor suppressor for mature B cells. Loss of TET2 phenocopies CREBBP somatic mutation. These results advocate for sequencing TET2 in patients with lymphoma and for the testing of epigenetic therapies to treat these tumors.See related commentary by Shingleton and Dave, p. 1515.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1494. ©2018 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30274972 PMCID: PMC6279514 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-18-0657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397