In vivo kinetics of early, non-random methylome and transcriptome changes induced by DNA-hypomethylating treatment in primary AML blasts

Author:

Greve Gabriele,Andrieux GeoffroyORCID,Schlosser PascalORCID,Blagitko-Dorfs Nadja,Rehman Usama-Ur,Ma Tobias,Pfeifer Dietmar,Heil Gerhard,Neubauer Andreas,Krauter Jürgen,Heuser MichaelORCID,Salih Helmut R.,Döhner KonstanzeORCID,Döhner HartmutORCID,Hackanson BjörnORCID,Boerries Melanie,Lübbert MichaelORCID

Abstract

AbstractDespite routine use of DNA-hypomethylating agents (HMAs) in AML/MDS therapy, their mechanisms of action are not yet unraveled. Pleiotropic effects of HMAs include global methylome and transcriptome changes. We asked whether in blasts and T-cells from AML patients HMA-induced in vivo demethylation and remethylation occur randomly or non-randomly, and whether gene demethylation is associated with gene induction. Peripheral blood AML blasts from patients receiving decitabine (20 mg/m2 day 1–5) were serially isolated for methylome analyses (days 0, 8 and 15, n = 28) and methylome-plus-transcriptome analyses (days 0 and 8, n = 23), respectively. T-cells were isolated for methylome analyses (days 0 and 8; n = 16). We noted massive, non-random demethylation at day 8, which was variable between patients. In contrast, T-cells disclosed a thousand-fold lesser, random demethylation, indicating selectivity of the demethylation for the malignant blasts. The integrative analysis of DNA demethylation and transcript induction revealed 87 genes displaying a significant inverse correlation, e.g. the tumor suppressor gene IFI27, whose derepression was validated in two AML cell lines. These results support HMA-induced, non-random early in vivo demethylation events in AML blasts associated with gene induction. Larger patient cohorts are needed to determine whether a demethylation signature may be predictive for response to this treatment.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Oncology,Cancer Research,Hematology

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