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Integrative epigenomic and high-throughput functional enhancer profiling reveals determinants of enhancer heterogeneity in gastric cancer.

Authors :
Sheng T
Ho SWT
Ooi WF
Xu C
Xing M
Padmanabhan N
Huang KK
Ma L
Ray M
Guo YA
Sim NL
Anene-Nzelu CG
Chang MM
Razavi-Mohseni M
Beer MA
Foo RSY
Sundar R
Chan YH
Tan ALK
Ong X
Skanderup AJ
White KP
Jha S
Tan P
Source :
Genome medicine [Genome Med] 2021 Oct 11; Vol. 13 (1), pp. 158. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Oct 11.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Enhancers are distal cis-regulatory elements required for cell-specific gene expression and cell fate determination. In cancer, enhancer variation has been proposed as a major cause of inter-patient heterogeneity-however, most predicted enhancer regions remain to be functionally tested.<br />Methods: We analyzed 132 epigenomic histone modification profiles of 18 primary gastric cancer (GC) samples, 18 normal gastric tissues, and 28 GC cell lines using Nano-ChIP-seq technology. We applied Capture-based Self-Transcribing Active Regulatory Region sequencing (CapSTARR-seq) to assess functional enhancer activity. An Activity-by-contact (ABC) model was employed to explore the effects of histone acetylation and CapSTARR-seq levels on enhancer-promoter interactions.<br />Results: We report a comprehensive catalog of 75,730 recurrent predicted enhancers, the majority of which are GC-associated in vivo (> 50,000) and associated with lower somatic mutation rates inferred by whole-genome sequencing. Applying CapSTARR-seq to the enhancer catalog, we observed significant correlations between CapSTARR-seq functional activity and H3K27ac/H3K4me1 levels. Super-enhancer regions exhibited increased CapSTARR-seq signals compared to regular enhancers, even when decoupled from native chromatin contexture. We show that combining histone modification and CapSTARR-seq functional enhancer data improves the prediction of enhancer-promoter interactions and pinpointing of germline single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs), and trans-acting TFs involved in GC expression. We identified cancer-relevant genes (ING1, ARL4C) whose expression between patients is influenced by enhancer differences in genomic copy number and germline SNPs, and HNF4α as a master trans-acting factor associated with GC enhancer heterogeneity.<br />Conclusions: Our results indicate that combining histone modification and functional assay data may provide a more accurate metric to assess enhancer activity than either platform individually, providing insights into the relative contribution of genetic (cis) and regulatory (trans) mechanisms to GC enhancer functional heterogeneity.<br /> (© 2021. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1756-994X
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Genome medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34635154
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-021-00970-3