Literature DB >> 31853060

Impaired cell fate through gain-of-function mutations in a chromatin reader.

Shasha Chong1,2, Fan Xuan3, Angela Liang4, Liling Wan5,6, Xiaodong Cui7, Leah Gates4, Thomas S Carroll8, Yuanyuan Li9, Lijuan Feng4, Guochao Chen9, Shu-Ping Wang10,11, Michael V Ortiz12, Sara K Daley13, Xiaolu Wang3, Hongwen Xuan3, Alex Kentsis12,14, Tom W Muir13, Robert G Roeder10, Haitao Li9, Wei Li7,15, Robert Tjian1,2,16, Hong Wen17, C David Allis18.   

Abstract

Modifications of histone proteins have essential roles in normal development and human disease. Recognition of modified histones by 'reader' proteins is a key mechanism that mediates the function of histone modifications, but how the dysregulation of these readers might contribute to disease remains poorly understood. We previously identified the ENL protein as a reader of histone acetylation via its YEATS domain, linking it to the expression of cancer-driving genes in acute leukaemia1. Recurrent hotspot mutations have been found in the ENL YEATS domain in Wilms tumour2,3, the most common type of paediatric kidney cancer. Here we show, using human and mouse cells, that these mutations impair cell-fate regulation by conferring gain-of-function in chromatin recruitment and transcriptional control. ENL mutants induce gene-expression changes that favour a premalignant cell fate, and, in an assay for nephrogenesis using murine cells, result in undifferentiated structures resembling those observed in human Wilms tumour. Mechanistically, although bound to largely similar genomic loci as the wild-type protein, ENL mutants exhibit increased occupancy at a subset of targets, leading to a marked increase in the recruitment and activity of transcription elongation machinery that enforces active transcription from target loci. Furthermore, ectopically expressed ENL mutants exhibit greater self-association and form discrete and dynamic nuclear puncta that are characteristic of biomolecular hubs consisting of local high concentrations of regulatory factors. Such mutation-driven ENL self-association is functionally linked to enhanced chromatin occupancy and gene activation. Collectively, our findings show that hotspot mutations in a chromatin-reader domain drive self-reinforced recruitment, derailing normal cell-fate control during development and leading to an oncogenic outcome.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31853060      PMCID: PMC7061414          DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1842-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  21 in total

Review 1.  Biomolecular Condensates in the Nucleus.

Authors:  Benjamin R Sabari; Alessandra Dall'Agnese; Richard A Young
Journal:  Trends Biochem Sci       Date:  2020-07-17       Impact factor: 13.807

2.  Loci-specific phase separation of FET fusion oncoproteins promotes gene transcription.

Authors:  Linyu Zuo; Guanwei Zhang; Matthew Massett; Jun Cheng; Zicong Guo; Liang Wang; Yifei Gao; Ru Li; Xu Huang; Pilong Li; Zhi Qi
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-03-05       Impact factor: 14.919

3.  Genetic variation associated with condensate dysregulation in disease.

Authors:  Salman F Banani; Lena K Afeyan; Susana W Hawken; Jonathan E Henninger; Alessandra Dall'Agnese; Victoria E Clark; Jesse M Platt; Ozgur Oksuz; Nancy M Hannett; Ido Sagi; Tong Ihn Lee; Richard A Young
Journal:  Dev Cell       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 13.417

Review 4.  Transcriptional enhancers at 40: evolution of a viral DNA element to nuclear architectural structures.

Authors:  Sreejith J Nair; Tom Suter; Susan Wang; Lu Yang; Feng Yang; Michael G Rosenfeld
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2022-07-07       Impact factor: 11.821

5.  cBAF complex components and MYC cooperate early in CD8+ T cell fate.

Authors:  Ao Guo; Hongling Huang; Zhexin Zhu; Mark J Chen; Hao Shi; Sujing Yuan; Piyush Sharma; Jon P Connelly; Swantje Liedmann; Yogesh Dhungana; Zhenrui Li; Dalia Haydar; Mao Yang; Helen Beere; Jason T Yustein; Christopher DeRenzo; Shondra M Pruett-Miller; Jeremy Chase Crawford; Giedre Krenciute; Charles W M Roberts; Hongbo Chi; Douglas R Green
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2022-06-22       Impact factor: 69.504

6.  Epigenetic reader SP140 loss of function drives Crohn's disease due to uncontrolled macrophage topoisomerases.

Authors:  Hajera Amatullah; Isabella Fraschilla; Sreehaas Digumarthi; Julie Huang; Fatemeh Adiliaghdam; Gracia Bonilla; Lai Ping Wong; Marie-Eve Rivard; Claudine Beauchamp; Virginie Mercier; Philippe Goyette; Ruslan I Sadreyev; Robert M Anthony; John D Rioux; Kate L Jeffrey
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2022-08-10       Impact factor: 66.850

Review 7.  The language of chromatin modification in human cancers.

Authors:  Shuai Zhao; C David Allis; Gang Greg Wang
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2021-05-17       Impact factor: 60.716

Review 8.  Biomolecular Condensates and Cancer.

Authors:  Ann Boija; Isaac A Klein; Richard A Young
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2021-01-07       Impact factor: 31.743

9.  Phase separation drives aberrant chromatin looping and cancer development.

Authors:  Jeong Hyun Ahn; Eric S Davis; Timothy A Daugird; Shuai Zhao; Ivana Yoseli Quiroga; Hidetaka Uryu; Jie Li; Aaron J Storey; Yi-Hsuan Tsai; Daniel P Keeley; Samuel G Mackintosh; Ricky D Edmondson; Stephanie D Byrum; Ling Cai; Alan J Tackett; Deyou Zheng; Wesley R Legant; Douglas H Phanstiel; Gang Greg Wang
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-06-23       Impact factor: 69.504

Review 10.  The Intrinsically Disordered Proteins MLLT3 (AF9) and MLLT1 (ENL) - Multimodal Transcriptional Switches With Roles in Normal Hematopoiesis, MLL Fusion Leukemia, and Kidney Cancer.

Authors:  Ashish Kabra; John Bushweller
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2021-06-23       Impact factor: 5.469

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