Superenhancer reprogramming drives a B-cell–epithelial transition and high-risk leukemia

Author:

Hu Yeguang,Zhang Zhihong,Kashiwagi Mariko,Yoshida Toshimi,Joshi Ila,Jena Nilamani,Somasundaram Rajesh,Emmanuel Akinola Olumide,Sigvardsson Mikael,Fitamant Julien,El-Bardeesy Nabeel,Gounari Fotini,Van Etten Richard A.,Georgopoulos Katia

Abstract

IKAROS is required for the differentiation of highly proliferative pre-B-cell precursors, and loss of IKAROS function indicates poor prognosis in precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). Here we show that IKAROS regulates this developmental stage by positive and negative regulation of superenhancers with distinct lineage affiliations. IKAROS defines superenhancers at pre-B-cell differentiation genes together with B-cell master regulators such as PAX5, EBF1, and IRF4 but is required for a highly permissive chromatin environment, a function that cannot be compensated for by the other transcription factors. IKAROS is also highly enriched at inactive enhancers of genes normally expressed in stem–epithelial cells. Upon IKAROS loss, expression of pre-B-cell differentiation genes is attenuated, while a group of extralineage transcription factors that are directly repressed by IKAROS and depend on EBF1 relocalization at their enhancers for expression is induced. LHX2, LMO2, and TEAD–YAP1, normally kept separate from native B-cell transcription regulators by IKAROS, now cooperate directly with them in a de novo superenhancer network with its own feed-forward transcriptional reinforcement. Induction of de novo superenhancers antagonizes Polycomb repression and superimposes aberrant stem–epithelial cell properties in a B-cell precursor. This dual mechanism of IKAROS regulation promotes differentiation while safeguarding against a hybrid stem–epithelial–B-cell phenotype that underlies high-risk B-ALL.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Developmental Biology,Genetics

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