Back to Search Start Over

Extreme structural heterogeneity rewires glioblastoma chromosomes to sustain patient-specific transcriptional programs

Authors :
Ting Xie
Adi Danieli-Mackay
Mariachiara Buccarelli
Mariano Barbieri
Ioanna Papadionysiou
Q. Giorgio D’Alessandris
Nadine Übelmesser
Omkar Suhas Vinchure
Liverana Lauretti
Giorgio Fotia
Xiaotao Wang
Lucia Ricci-Vitiani
Jay Gopalakrishnan
Roberto Pallini
Argyris Papantonis
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) encompasses brain malignancies marked by phenotypic and transcriptional heterogeneity thought to render these tumors aggressive, resistant to therapy, and inevitably recurrent. However, little is known about how the spatial organization of GBM genomes underlies this heterogeneity and its effects. Here, we compiled a cohort of 28 patient-derived glioblastoma stem cell-like lines (GSCs) known to reflect the properties of their tumor-of-origin; six of these were primary-relapse tumor pairs from the same patient. We generated and analyzed kbp-resolution chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C) data from all GSCs to systematically map >3,100 standalone and complex structural variants (SVs) and the >6,300 neoloops arising as a result. By combining Hi-C, histone modification, and gene expression data with chromatin folding simulations, we explain how the pervasive, uneven, and idiosyncratic occurrence of neoloops sustains tumor-specific transcriptional programs via the formation of new enhancer-promoter contacts. We also show how even moderately recurrent neoloops can help us infer patient-specific vulnerabilities. Together, our data provide a resource for dissecting GBM biology and heterogeneity, as well as for informing therapeutic approaches.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b90b45ee9070c0580ac7ce0f12da5967
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.20.537702