The linker histone H1.0 generates epigenetic and functional intratumor heterogeneity

Author:

Torres Cristina Morales1,Biran Alva2,Burney Matthew J.1,Patel Harshil3,Henser-Brownhill Tristan1,Cohen Ayelet-Hashahar Shapira2,Li Yilong4,Ben-Hamo Rotem5,Nye Emma6,Spencer-Dene Bradley6,Chakravarty Probir3,Efroni Sol5,Matthews Nik7,Misteli Tom8,Meshorer Eran2,Scaffidi Paola19

Affiliation:

1. Cancer Epigenetics Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, Lincoln’s Inn Fields Laboratory, London WC2A 3LY, UK.

2. Department of Genetics, The Institute of Life Sciences, and The Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences (ELSC), The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Edmond J. Safra Campus, Givat Ram, Jerusalem 91904, Israel.

3. Bioinformatics, The Francis Crick Institute, Lincoln’s Inn Fields Laboratory, London WC2A 3LY, UK.

4. Cancer Genome Project, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton CB101SA, UK.

5. The Mina and Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Science, Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, Israel.

6. Experimental Histopathology, The Francis Crick Institute, Lincoln’s Inn Fields Laboratory, London WC2A 3LY, UK.

7. Advanced Sequencing, The Francis Crick Institute, Lincoln’s Inn Fields Laboratory, London WC2A 3LY, UK.

8. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.

9. UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London WC1E 6DD, UK.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Cancer arises from clonal expansion of a single cell. Yet, most human cancers are characterized by extensive intratumor heterogeneity and comprise various subpopulations of cells with distinct phenotypes and biological properties. Intratumor heterogeneity poses major challenges in understanding cancers, managing patients, and designing effective treatment strategies. Functional heterogeneity within individual tumors is partly due to the presence of genetically distinct subclonal cell populations. Furthermore, interactions between cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment can alter the phenotype of cancer cells via nongenetic mechanisms. The combination of cell-intrinsic and cell-extrinsic changes occurring during tumor growth generates functionally distinct subsets of cells that differentially contribute to tumor maintenance. RATIONALE In many cancers, phenotypic and functional heterogeneity can be mapped to distinct differentiation states, suggesting that cellular hierarchies established during tumor growth may affect the long-term proliferative potential of cancer cells. To shed light on the mechanisms responsible for the generation of these hierarchies, we searched for epigenetic mechanisms that determine which cancer cells can preserve unlimited proliferative potential, and thus the ability to drive long-term tumor growth, and which cells lose this ability through a differentiation process. RESULTS We found that, in several cancer types, individual tumors exhibit high heterogeneity of the major chromatin protein linker histone H1.0, showing strongly reduced H1.0 levels in cells characterized by long-term self-renewal ability and tumorigenic potential and higher levels in nontumorigenic cells. Combined analysis of pan-cancer patient data sets and experimental alteration of the H1F0 locus in tumor cells revealed that heterogeneous H1.0 expression patterns are partly due to differential methylation of an enhancer region that dynamically modulates H1.0 expression within tumors. Using a controlled system to model functional intratumor heterogeneity, we showed that maintenance of cell tumorigenic potential required silencing of H1.0 to avoid loss of unlimited proliferative capacity through differentiation. Mechanistically, absence of H1.0 led to destabilization of nucleosome-DNA interactions in AT-rich genomic regions and coordinated derepression of large sets of neighboring genes, resulting in activation of transcriptional programs that support cancer cell self-renewal. Gene expression changes induced by H1.0 loss were reversible, and epigenetic states restricting cell proliferative potential were reestablished upon H1.0 reexpression. In multiple cancer types, in agreement with the observed inhibition of cancer cell self-renewal by H1.0, patients expressing overall strongly reduced levels of H1.0 showed a significantly worse outcome than patients expressing higher H1.0 levels. CONCLUSION Intratumor heterogeneity has emerged as a general feature of cancer, but the molecular features underlying functionally diverse cellular phenotypes have been elusive. Our results uncover epigenetic determinants of tumor-maintaining cells and identify an integral component of chromatin as an important regulator of cell differentiation states within tumors. We propose that only cells insensitive to extracellular differentiation cues, capable of permanently silencing H1.0, can act as self-renewing tumor-maintaining cells and that such a mechanism supports maintenance of several types of cancer. Our results suggest that intervention aimed at restoring high levels of H1.0 in all cancer cells may enhance the differentiation process that naturally occurs during tumor growth and may be beneficial for therapeutic purposes. Epigenetic heterogeneity within tumors. In many cancer types, self-renewing and differentiated epigenetic states coexist in individual tumors. ( Left ) Image of a breast cancer section showing heterogeneous levels of the linker histone H1.0 (red). ( Right ) Schematic depiction of the chromatin status of cancer cells in which H1.0 is down-regulated (blue) or expressed at high levels (red).

Funder

Francis Crick Institute

Cancer Research UK

UK Medical Research Council

Wellcome Trust

NIH

NCI

Center for Cancer Research

Israel Science Foundation

European Research Council

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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