Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine and the Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, CA, United States of America.
Department of Surgery, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, CA, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2020 Sep 14;16(9):e1009023. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009023. eCollection 2020 Sep.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death and lung adenocarcinoma is its most common subtype. Although genetic alterations have been identified as drivers in subsets of lung adenocarcinoma, they do not fully explain tumor development. Epigenetic alterations have been implicated in the pathogenesis of tumors. To identify epigenetic alterations driving lung adenocarcinoma, we used an improved version of the Tracing Enhancer Networks using Epigenetic Traits method (TENET 2.0) in primary normal lung and lung adenocarcinoma cells. We found over 32,000 enhancers that appear differentially activated between normal lung and lung adenocarcinoma. Among the identified transcriptional regulators inactivated in lung adenocarcinoma vs. normal lung, NKX2-1 was linked to a large number of silenced enhancers. Among the activated transcriptional regulators identified, CENPA, FOXM1, and MYBL2 were linked to numerous cancer-specific enhancers. High expression of CENPA, FOXM1, and MYBL2 is particularly observed in a subgroup of lung adenocarcinomas and is associated with poor patient survival. Notably, CENPA, FOXM1, and MYBL2 are also key regulators of cancer-specific enhancers in breast adenocarcinoma of the basal subtype, but they are associated with distinct sets of activated enhancers. We identified individual lung adenocarcinoma enhancers linked to CENPA, FOXM1, or MYBL2 that were associated with poor patient survival. Knockdown experiments of FOXM1 and MYBL2 suggest that these factors regulate genes involved in controlling cell cycle progression and cell division. For example, we found that expression of TK1, a potential target gene of a MYBL2-linked enhancer, is associated with poor patient survival. Identification and characterization of key transcriptional regulators and associated enhancers in lung adenocarcinoma provides important insights into the deregulation of lung adenocarcinoma epigenomes, highlighting novel potential targets for clinical intervention.
肺癌是癌症相关死亡的主要原因,肺腺癌是其最常见的亚型。虽然已经确定了遗传改变是肺腺癌亚群的驱动因素,但它们并不能完全解释肿瘤的发展。表观遗传改变与肿瘤的发病机制有关。为了确定驱动肺腺癌的表观遗传改变,我们在原发性正常肺和肺腺癌细胞中使用了一种改进的使用表观遗传特征追踪增强子网络的方法(TENET 2.0)。我们发现超过 32000 个增强子在正常肺和肺腺癌之间表现出差异激活。在肺腺癌与正常肺相比失活的鉴定转录调节剂中,NKX2-1与大量沉默的增强子相关。在所鉴定的激活转录调节剂中,CENPA、FOXM1 和 MYBL2 与许多癌症特异性增强子相关。在肺腺癌的一个亚组中特别观察到 CENPA、FOXM1 和 MYBL2 的高表达,并且与患者生存不良相关。值得注意的是,CENPA、FOXM1 和 MYBL2 也是基底型乳腺腺癌中癌症特异性增强子的关键调节剂,但它们与不同的激活增强子相关联。我们鉴定了与 CENPA、FOXM1 或 MYBL2 相关的个体肺腺癌增强子,这些增强子与患者生存不良相关。FOXM1 和 MYBL2 的敲低实验表明,这些因子调节参与控制细胞周期进程和细胞分裂的基因。例如,我们发现,一个 MYBL2 相关增强子的潜在靶基因 TK1 的表达与患者生存不良相关。肺腺癌中关键转录调节剂和相关增强子的鉴定和特征描述为肺腺癌表观基因组的失调提供了重要的见解,突出了新的潜在临床干预靶点。