SUMMARY
Cancer cells simultaneously harbor global losses and gains in DNA methylation. We demonstrate that inducing cellular oxidative stress by treatment with hydrogen peroxide, recruits DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) to damaged chromatin. DNMT1 becomes part of a complex(es) containing DNMT3B and members of Polycomb Repressive Complex 4. Hydrogen peroxide treatment causes translocalization of these proteins from non-GC-rich to GC-rich areas. Key components are similarly enriched at gene promoters in an in vivo colitis model. While high expression genes enriched for members of the complex have histone mark and nascent transcription changes, CpG island-containing low expression genes gain promoter DNA methylation. Thus, oxidative damage induces formation and localization of a silencing complex that may explain cancer-specific aberrant DNA methylation and transcriptional silencing.
SUMMARY
Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARPis) are clinically effective predominantly for BRCA-mutant tumors. We introduce a mechanism-based strategy to enhance PARPi efficacy based on DNA damage-related binding between DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) and PARP1. In AML and breast cancer cells, DNMT inhibitors (DNMTis) alone covalently bind DNMTs into DNA and increase PARP1 tightly bound into chromatin. Low doses of DNMTis plus PARPis, versus each drug alone, increase PARPi efficacy, increasing amplitude and retention of PARP1 directly at laser-induced DNA damage sites. This correlates with increased DNA damage, synergistic tumor cytotoxicity, blunting of self-renewal and strong anti-tumor responses in unfavorable AML subtypes and BRCA wild-type breast cancer cells. Our combinatorial approach introduces a strategy to enhance efficacy of PARPis in treating cancer.
SUMMARY
An oncogenic role for CHD4, a NuRD component, is defined for initiating and supporting tumor suppressor gene (TSG) silencing in human colorectal cancer. CHD4 recruits repressive chromatin proteins to sites of DNA damage repair, including DNA methyltransferases where it imposes de novo DNA methylation. At TSGs, CHD4 retention helps maintain DNA hypermethylation-associated transcriptional silencing. CHD4 is recruited by the excision repair protein OGG1 for oxidative damage to interact with the damage-induced base 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), while ZMYND8 recruits it to double-strand breaks. CHD4 knockdown activates silenced TSGs, revealing their role for blunting colorectal cancer cell proliferation, invasion, and metastases. High CHD4 and 8-OHdG levels plus low expression of TSGs strongly correlates with early disease recurrence and decreased overall survival.
SUMMARY
We addressed the precursor role of aging-like spontaneous promoter DNA
hypermethylation in initiating tumorigenesis. Using mouse colon-derived
organoids, we show that promoter hypermethylation spontaneously arises in cells
mimicking the human aging-like phenotype. The silenced genes activate the Wnt
pathway, causing a stem-like state and differentiation defects. These changes
render aged organoids profoundly more sensitive than young ones to
transformation by BrafV600E,
producing the typical human proximal
BRAFV600E-driven colon adenocarcinomas characterized
by extensive, abnormal gene-promoter CpG-island methylation, or the methylator
phenotype (CIMP). Conversely, CRISPR-mediated simultaneous inactivation of a
panel of the silenced genes markedly sensitizes to
BrafV600E-induced
transformation. Our studies tightly link aging-like epigenetic abnormalities to
intestinal cell fate changes and predisposition to oncogene-driven colon
tumorigenesis.
Graphical Abstract Highlights d UHRF1 maintains cancer-specific DNA methylation through its chromatin reader domains d PHD and SRA domain mutants phenocopy UHRF1 depletion to reverse DNA hypermethylation d Disrupting PHD or SRA domain functions impairs key oncogenic properties of CRC cells d The maintenance function of overexpressed UHRF1 in CRC has prognostic significance SUMMARY UHRF1 facilitates the establishment and maintenance of DNA methylation patterns in mammalian cells. The establishment domains are defined, including E3 ligase function, but the maintenance domains are poorly characterized. Here, we demonstrate that UHRF1 histone-and hemimethylated DNA binding functions, but not E3 ligase activity, maintain cancer-specific DNA methylation in human colorectal cancer (CRC) cells. Disrupting either chromatin reader activity reverses DNA hypermethylation, reactivates epigenetically silenced tumor suppressor genes (TSGs), and reduces CRC oncogenic properties. Moreover, an inverse correlation between high UHRF1 and low TSG expression tracks with CRC progression and reduced patient survival. Defining critical UHRF1 domain functions and its relationship with CRC prognosis suggests directions for, and value of, targeting this protein to develop therapeutic DNA demethylating agents.
Summary
TET proteins, by converting 5-methylcytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), are hypothesized, but not directly shown, to protect promoter CpG islands (CGIs) against abnormal DNA methylation (DNAm) in cancer. We define such a protective role linked to DNA damage from oxidative stress (OS) known to induce this abnormality. TET2 removes aberrant DNAm during OS through interacting with DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) in a “Yin-Yang” complex targeted to chromatin and enhanced by p300 mediated TET2 acetylation. Abnormal gains of DNAm and 5hmC occur simultaneously in OS and knocking down TET2 dynamically alters this balance by enhancing 5mC and reducing 5hmC. TET2 reduction results in hypermethylation of promoter CGIs and enhancers in loci largely overlapping with those induced by OS. Thus, TET2 indeed may protect against abnormal, cancer DNAm in a manner linked to DNA damage.
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