Comparison of Genome-Wide Binding of MyoD in Normal Human Myogenic Cells and Rhabdomyosarcomas Identifies Regional and Local Suppression of Promyogenic Transcription Factors

Author:

MacQuarrie Kyle L.12,Yao Zizhen1,Fong Abraham P.34,Diede Scott J.34,Rudzinski Erin R.5,Hawkins Douglas S.46,Tapscott Stephen J.137

Affiliation:

1. Divisions of Human Biology, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, USA

2. Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA

3. Clinical Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, USA

4. Departments of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA

5. Department of Pathology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon, USA

6. Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington, USA

7. Neurology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTRhabdomyosarcoma is a pediatric tumor of skeletal muscle that expresses the myogenic basic helix-loop-helix protein MyoD but fails to undergo terminal differentiation. Prior work has determined that DNA binding by MyoD occurs in the tumor cells, but myogenic targets fail to activate. Using MyoD chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled to high-throughput sequencing and gene expression analysis in both primary human muscle cells and RD rhabdomyosarcoma cells, we demonstrate that MyoD binds in a similar genome-wide pattern in both tumor and normal cells but binds poorly at a subset of myogenic genes that fail to activate in the tumor cells. Binding differences are found both across genomic regions and locally at specific sites that are associated with binding motifs for RUNX1, MEF2C, JDP2, and NFIC. These factors are expressed at lower levels in RD cells than muscle cells and rescue myogenesis when expressed in RD cells. MEF2C is located in a genomic region that exhibits poor MyoD binding in RD cells, whereas JDP2 exhibits local DNA hypermethylation in its promoter in both RD cells and primary tumor samples. These results demonstrate that regional and local silencing of differentiation factors contributes to the differentiation defect in rhabdomyosarcomas.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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