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Genomic and epigenomic EBF1 alterations modulate TERT expression in gastric cancer

Authors :
Zul Fazreen Adam Isa
Mandoli Amit
Aditi Qamra
Mei Mei Chang
Nisha Padmanabhan
Kakoli Das
Jing Wang
Mohana Ray
Angie Lay Keng Tan
Giovani Claresta Wijaya
Michael A. Beer
Shamaine Wei Ting Ho
Xuewen Ong
Patrick Tan
Ming Hui Lee
Jing Tan
Kie Kyon Huang
Bin Tean Teh
Chukwuemeka George Anene-Nzelu
Taotao Sheng
Zhimei Li
Heike I. Grabsch
Polly Poon
Su Ting Tay
Shenli Zhang
Shang Li
Tannistha Nandi
Jing Quan Lim
Xiaosai Yao
Po Hsien Lee
Wen Fong Ooi
Kevin P. White
Roger Foo
Tingdong Yan
Ley Moy Ng
Gregorio E. Fazzi
Steven G. Rozen
Jeanie Wu
Yu Amanda Guo
Manjie Xing
Kevin Lim
Lijia Ma
Yue Ning Lam
Joyce Suling Lin
Anders Jacobsen Skanderup
Chang Xu
Pathologie
RS: GROW - R2 - Basic and Translational Cancer Biology
Source :
J Clin Invest, Journal of Clinical Investigation, 130(6), 3005-3020. American Society for Clinical Investigation
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Transcriptional reactivation of telomerase catalytic subunit (TERT) is a frequent hallmark of cancer, occurring in 90% of human malignancies. However, specific mechanisms driving TERT reactivation remain obscure for many tumor types and in particular gastric cancer (GC), a leading cause of global cancer mortality. Here, through comprehensive genomic and epigenomic analysis of primary GCs and GC cell lines, we identified the transcription factor early B cell factor 1 (EBF1) as a TERT transcriptional repressor and inactivation of EBF1 function as a major cause of TERT upregulation. Abolishment of EBF1 function occurs through 3 distinct (epi)genomic mechanisms. First, EBF1 is epigenetically silenced via DNA methyltransferase, polycomb-repressive complex 2 (PRC2), and histone deacetylase activity in GCs. Second, recurrent, somatic, and heterozygous EBF1 DNA-binding domain mutations result in the production of dominant-negative EBF1 isoforms. Third, more rarely, genomic deletions and rearrangements proximal to the TERT promoter remobilize or abolish EBF1-binding sites, derepressing TERT and leading to high TERT expression. EBF1 is also functionally required for various malignant phenotypes in vitro and in vivo, highlighting its importance for GC development. These results indicate that multimodal genomic and epigenomic alterations underpin TERT reactivation in GC, converging on transcriptional repressors such as EBF1.

Details

ISSN :
15588238 and 00219738
Volume :
130
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ad4af4c0f72d99bfe48547ad2ad15e6