| Literature DB >> 35121888 |
Moritz Gartlgruber1,2, Ashwini Kumar Sharma1,2,3, Andrés Quintero1,2,3, Daniel Dreidax1,2, Carl Herrmann4, Frank Westermann5,6, Selina Jansky1,2, Young-Gyu Park1,2, Sina Kreth1,2, Johanna Meder1,2, Daria Doncevic3, Paul Saary3, Umut H Toprak1,2, Naveed Ishaque7, Elena Afanasyeva1,2, Elisa Wecht1,2, Jan Koster8, Rogier Versteeg8, Thomas G P Grünewald1,9,10, David T W Jones1,11, Stefan M Pfister1,12,13, Kai-Oliver Henrich1,2, Johan van Nes8.
Abstract
Half of the children diagnosed with neuroblastoma (NB) have high-risk disease, disproportionately contributing to overall childhood cancer-related deaths. In addition to recurrent gene mutations, there is increasing evidence supporting the role of epigenetic deregulation in disease pathogenesis. Yet, comprehensive cis-regulatory network descriptions from NB are lacking. Here, using genome-wide H3K27ac profiles across 60 NBs, covering the different clinical and molecular subtypes, we identified four major super-enhancer-driven epigenetic subtypes and their underlying master regulatory networks. Three of these subtypes recapitulated known clinical groups; namely, MYCN-amplified, MYCN non-amplified high-risk and MYCN non-amplified low-risk NBs. The fourth subtype, exhibiting mesenchymal characteristics, shared cellular identity with multipotent Schwann cell precursors, was induced by RAS activation and was enriched in relapsed disease. Notably, CCND1, an essential gene in NB, was regulated by both mesenchymal and adrenergic regulatory networks converging on distinct super-enhancer modules. Overall, this study reveals subtype-specific super-enhancer regulation in NBs.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 35121888 DOI: 10.1038/s43018-020-00145-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cancer ISSN: 2662-1347