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CREBBP Inactivation Promotes the Development of HDAC3-Dependent Lymphomas

Authors :
Dylan R. McNally
Robert G. Roeder
Ling Wang
David W. Scott
Zhuoning Li
Janice E. Kranz
Cem Meydan
Edward B. Holson
Olivier Elemento
Ashley S. Doane
Yanwen Jiang
Wayne Tam
Xabier Agirre
Randy D. Gascoyne
Ari Melnick
James W. Young
Kristy R. Stengel
Daisuke Ennishi
Sneh Sharma
Hsia-Yuan Ying
Shenqiu Wang
Ana Ortega-Molina
Scott W. Hiebert
Katerina Hatzi
Huimin Geng
David Poloway
Sara Parsa
Matt Teater
Hans-Guido Wendel
Chi-Shuen Chu
Rita Shaknovich
Source :
Cancer discovery, vol 7, iss 1
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2017.

Abstract

Somatic mutations in CREBBP occur frequently in B-cell lymphoma. Here, we show that loss of CREBBP facilitates the development of germinal center (GC)–derived lymphomas in mice. In both human and murine lymphomas, CREBBP loss-of-function resulted in focal depletion of enhancer H3K27 acetylation and aberrant transcriptional silencing of genes that regulate B-cell signaling and immune responses, including class II MHC. Mechanistically, CREBBP-regulated enhancers are counter-regulated by the BCL6 transcriptional repressor in a complex with SMRT and HDAC3, which we found to bind extensively to MHC class II loci. HDAC3 loss-of-function rescued repression of these enhancers and corresponding genes, including MHC class II, and more profoundly suppressed CREBBP-mutant lymphomas in vitro and in vivo. Hence, CREBBP loss-of-function contributes to lymphomagenesis by enabling unopposed suppression of enhancers by BCL6/SMRT/HDAC3 complexes, suggesting HDAC3-targeted therapy as a precision approach for CREBBP-mutant lymphomas. Significance: Our findings establish the tumor suppressor function of CREBBP in GC lymphomas in which CREBBP mutations disable acetylation and result in unopposed deacetylation by BCL6/SMRT/HDAC3 complexes at enhancers of B-cell signaling and immune response genes. Hence, inhibition of HDAC3 can restore the enhancer histone acetylation and may serve as a targeted therapy for CREBBP-mutant lymphomas. Cancer Discov; 7(1); 38–53. ©2016 AACR. See related commentary by Höpken, p. 14. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer discovery, vol 7, iss 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62a9e9baeae50e4d58f8ec6351515caa