Author:
Soto-Feliciano Yadira M.,Bartlebaugh Jordan M.E.,Liu Yunpeng,Sánchez-Rivera Francisco J.,Bhutkar Arjun,Weintraub Abraham S.,Buenrostro Jason D.,Cheng Christine S.,Regev Aviv,Jacks Tyler E.,Young Richard A.,Hemann Michael T.
Abstract
Developmental and lineage plasticity have been observed in numerous malignancies and have been correlated with tumor progression and drug resistance. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms that enable such plasticity to occur. Here, we describe the function of the plant homeodomain finger protein 6 (PHF6) in leukemia and define its role in regulating chromatin accessibility to lineage-specific transcription factors. We show that loss of Phf6 in B-cell leukemia results in systematic changes in gene expression via alteration of the chromatin landscape at the transcriptional start sites of B-cell- and T-cell-specific factors. Additionally, Phf6KO cells show significant down-regulation of genes involved in the development and function of normal B cells, show up-regulation of genes involved in T-cell signaling, and give rise to mixed-lineage lymphoma in vivo. Engagement of divergent transcriptional programs results in phenotypic plasticity that leads to altered disease presentation in vivo, tolerance of aberrant oncogenic signaling, and differential sensitivity to frontline and targeted therapies. These findings suggest that active maintenance of a precise chromatin landscape is essential for sustaining proper leukemia cell identity and that loss of a single factor (PHF6) can cause focal changes in chromatin accessibility and nucleosome positioning that render cells susceptible to lineage transition.
Funder
National Cancer Institute
National Institutes of Health
National Science Foundation
Ludwig Center for Molecular Oncology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Koch Institute
Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center
NCI
NIH
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Developmental Biology,Genetics
Cited by
48 articles.
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