| Literature DB >> 31126313 |
Lipei Shao1,2, Xianglin Zuo1,2, Yin Yang1,2, Yu Zhang1,2, Nan Yang1, Bin Shen3, Jianying Wang3, Xuchun Wang1,2, Ruilei Li4, Guangfu Jin5,6, Dawei Yu1,2, Yuan Chen1,2, Luan Sun1,2, Zhen Li4, Qiaofen Fu4, Zhibin Hu5,6, Xiao Han1, Xin Song7, Hongbin Shen8,9, Yujie Sun10,11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inherited factors contribute to lung cancer risk, but the mechanism is not well understood. Defining the biological consequence of GWAS hits in cancers is a promising strategy to elucidate the inherited mechanisms of cancers. The tag-SNP rs753955 (A>G) in 13q12.12 is highly associated with lung cancer risk in the Chinese population. Here, we systematically investigate the biological significance and the underlying mechanism behind 13q12.12 risk locus in vitro and in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: 13q12.12 risk locus; Enhancer; Lung cancer; Risk SNP; TNFRSF19
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31126313 PMCID: PMC6533720 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-019-1696-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1Identification of an active enhancer with lung cell specificity in the high LD region of rs753955. a Overview of the epigenetic profiling of H3K4me1, H3K4me3, and H3K27ac chromatin modifications, distributions of DNase I hypersensitivity clusters and transcription factor binding sites in the LD region for the human lung fibroblast cell line NHLF released by UCSC databases. The red rectangle is indicative of the putative active enhancer. The locations of the tag SNP and the three highly linked SNPs within the putative enhancer are indicated by vertical dotted lines in red. b A diagram displaying the relative positions of the putative enhancer13q-Enh and two nearest genes, TNFRSF19 and MIPEP, and the Tag-SNP rs753955 marked in a red triangle. c Activity and specificity examination of the putative enhancer 13q-Enh. Different cell lines were transiently transfected with the 13q-Enh-pGL3-promoter plasmid and tested for luciferase activity after 24 h. The pGL3-promoter plasmid without the putative enhancer sequence was used as a negative control. The luciferase signal was normalized to the Renilla signal. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, *p < 0.05, unpaired Student’s t test). The 13q-Enh displayed significantly high enhancer activity in the normal lung cell lines, Beas-2B, HFL1, and MRC5. d The profiling of H3K27ac chromatin modifications of the 13q-Enh region in a lung tissue and 11 non-lung tissues, indicating the high lung tissue specificity of the 13q-Enh activity. The 13q-Enh enhancer region is marked by a red rectangle
Fig. 2Effects of deleting the 13q-Enh on Beas-2B cells. a Soft agar assays for the wild-type and 13q-Enh−/− Beas-2B cells (C5 and C23) treated by NNK for 15 generations. The corresponding colony number is indicated at the lower left corner of each picture. b Knockout of the 13q-Enh promoted NNK-induced malignant transformation of Beas-2B cells. The colony number ratios of NNK over DMSO for wild-type and 13q-Enh−/− clones were compared to correct the possible change of “baseline” colony formation caused by knockout of this enhancer. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, *p < 0.05, unpaired Student’s t test). c γ-H2AX analysis of the cells treated with NNK for 15 generations to evaluate DNA damages in the wild-type cells and 13q-Enh−/− clones. The nuclei were stained with Hoechst 33258 (blue), and breaking DNA ends were detected with γ-H2AX antibody (red). d The γ-H2AX signal ratios of NNK over DMSO for the wild-type and 13q-Enh−/− clones were compared. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, *p < 0.05, unpaired Student’s t test). e DNA repair efficiency of the wild-type Beas-2B cells and the two 13q-Enh−/− clones were compared using host-cell reactivation (HCR) as described in the “Materials and methods” section. DNA repair efficiency was reflected by luciferase activity. The results indicated that deletion of the enhancer significantly impaired the DNA repair efficiency. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). f Cell apoptosis analysis of the H2O2-treated wild-type Beas-2B and 13q-Enh−/− clones. Cells treated with 100 μM H2O2 were incubated for 4 h and harvested for Annexin-V/d PI double staining followed by flow cytometry analysis. g Statistical analysis of cell apoptosis percentages. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, *p < 0.05, unpaired Student’s t test)
Fig. 313q-Enh regulated the phenotypes of Beas-2B cells by enhancing the expression of TNFRSF19. a The TNFRSF19 expression levels were significantly reduced in 13q-Enh−/− C5 and C23 clones compared with the wild-type Beas-2B cells. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). b A schematic diagram showing the relative positions of the TNFRSF19 gene promoter, 13q-Enh enhancer, AseI restriction enzyme cut sites, and PCR primers for 3C assays (upper panel). 3C assays detected the physical interaction between the TNFRSF19 gene promoter and 13q-Enh element in wild-type Beas-2B cells, but not in 13q-Enh−/− clones (a mixture of C5 and C23), either using paired PCR primers, A+C or B+D (low panel). c Soft agar assays were performed to determine the effect of restoration of TNFRSF19 expression on NNK-induced malignant transformation in the 13q-Enh−/− clones. The C5-NNK and C23-NNK clones were infected with the lentivirus vectors expressing TNFRSF19 or the empty and were subsequently incubated in soft agar for colony formation. d The colony numbers were accounted and statistically analyzed. The results showed that restoration of the TNFRSF19 expression significantly reduced the NNK-induced cell transformation. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). e γ-H2AX was used to evaluate the effects of restoration of TNFRSF19 on the NNK-induced DNA damage in C5-NNK and C23-NNK cells. Cell nuclei were stained with Hoechst 33258 (blue), and breaking DNA ends were detected by γ-H2AX antibody (red). f Statistical analysis of the data shown in e indicated that restoration of TNFRSF19 expression significantly suppressed NNK-induced DNA damage. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test)
Fig. 4The mutant haplotype reduced 13q-Enh enhancer activity by impairing the enhancer p53 response. a Diagram displaying the relative positions of the p53 binding sites and the three common SNPs in the 13q-Enh enhancer. b Western blotting confirmed the increased p53 protein level in Beas-2B transfected with p53 expression plasmids (left panel) and the decreased p53 protein level in Beas-2B cells with p53-knockdown (right panel). c Luciferase reporter assays showed significantly differential responsiveness of the wild-type allele and the mutant C-G-C allele in Beas-2B cells that either overexpressed p53 (left panel) or knockdown of p53(middle panel) which was stronger than that in the control. So did the responsiveness of wild-type and mutant enhancer in NNK-treated cells (right panel). The mutational effects were strengthened in response to p53 or in the case of NNK exposure. d Western blot indicated that NNK treatment significantly induced the expression of p53 in Beas-2B and MRC-5 cells. e Real-time PCR revealed that overexpression of p53 significantly increased the TNFRSF19 expression in Beas-2B wild-type cells, but had almost no effect on this gene expression in the 13q-Enh−/− clones (left panel). Similarly, NNK also induced differential expression of the TNFRSF19 in wild-type Beas-2B cells and the 13q-Enh−/− clones (right panel). f The 13q-Enh activity (left panel) and the TNFRSF19 expression (right panel) were also significantly enhanced in MRC-5 cells that overexpressed p53 or were treated by NNK
Fig. 5Analysis of p53 bindings on the 13q-Enh enhancer using ChIP assays and EMSA. a The schematic diagram showing the relative positions of six p53 binding sites and five sequences for ChIP and three pairs of EMSA probes to the 5′ boundary of the 13q-Enh. b ChIP assays showed that all the five sequences, but not the negative control sequence S-N, were specifically precipitated with anti-p53 antibodies, indicating p53 binds to the 13q-Enh in vivo. c EMSA assays demonstrated the specific p53 binding to the 13q-Enh and the genetic variations affected the bindings of p53 protein complexes to the enhancer region. Each panel represents the results using the corresponding paired of probes as indicated. Lane 1 and lane 9: negative control using free probes without nuclear extracts; lane 2 and lane 8: using nuclear extract with the biotin-labeled wide-type or mutant probes, respectively; p53 protein complexes formed at wild-type and mutant probes are indicated by black arrows; lane 3: using unlabeled specific wild-type probes pre-incubated with nuclear extracts; lane 4: Sp1 consensus sequence that was used as non-specific control probe; lane 5 and lane 6: using 1 μg and 2 μg anti-p53 antibody to pre-incubate with the nuclear extracts, respectively; lane 7: negative control using 2 μg mouse IgG to pre-incubate with the nuclear extracts
Fig. 6TNFRSF19 expression quantitative trait locus analysis. a Genotype and qPCR analyses indicated significant quantitative trait loci (eQTL) associations between genotypes of the mutant haplotype alleles of rs17336602, rs4770489, and rs34354770 with the TNFRSF19 expression in 117 NSCLC samples. TNFRSF19 expression levels were log2 transformed. The box plot displays the first and third quartiles (top and bottom of the boxes) and the median (band inside the boxes). The results are indicated as median and quartiles (β = − 0.06841, p = 0.031). b rs4770489 and c rs34354770 eQTL expression analysis with TNFRSF19 using data from the Genotype-Tissue Expression Project (GTEx v7)
Fig. 7Analysis of the impacts of deregulated TNFRSF19 expression in vivo and in vitro. a The expression levels of TNFRSF19 in 117 NSCLC and the paired para-cancer tissue samples were detected by RT-qPCR analyses. The horizontal line indicates the mean expression level. (**p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). b The expression levels of TNFRSF19 in 107 NSCLC tissues from TCGA on July 8, 2014, and c 81.31% showed downregulation of TNFRSF19 expression. The paired sample t test was used to examine the differences in gene expression between the tumors and adjacent normal tissues. d In total, 110 NSCLC lung cancer samples showed that the TNFRSF19 expression was negatively correlated with tumor staging. The horizontal line indicates the mean expression level. (**p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). e TNFRSF19 expression was negatively correlated with the tumor size of 110 NSCLC lung cancer samples. The horizontal line indicates the mean expression level. (*p < 0.05, unpaired Student’s t test). f Analysis of the expression of TNFRSF19 at different N stages of 108 NSCLC lung cancer samples. The horizontal line indicates the mean expression level. (**p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). g Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a positive correlation between TNFRSF19 and overall survival (OS) in 1145 NSCLC patients. h A549 lung cancer cells that usually express low level of TNFRSF19 were infected with the lentivirus vectors expressing TNFRSF19 or the empty and were subsequently incubated in soft agar for colony formation (left and meddle panels). The colony numbers were statistically analyzed (right panel). The results showed that the introduction of TNFRSF19 into A549 cells significantly suppressed the colony formation. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test). i Transwell assays were used to evaluate the effect of the increase in TNFRSF19 on the invasive ability of the A549 cells (left and middle panels). The statistical analysis showed that the introduction of TNFRSF19 into the A549 cells significantly inhibited the cell invasion. (n = 3 per group; error bars are SD; **p < 0.01, unpaired Student’s t test)