11 research outputs found
SHQ1 regulation of RNA splicing is required for T-lymphoblastic leukemia cell survival
T-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive hematologic malignancy with complicated heterogeneity. Although expression profiling reveals common elevated genes in distinct T-ALL subtypes, little is known about their functional role(s) and regulatory mechanism(s). We here show that SHQ1, an H/ACA snoRNP assembly factor involved in snRNA pseudouridylation, is highly expressed in T-ALL. Mechanistically, oncogenic NOTCH1 directly binds to the SHQ1 promoter and activates its transcription. SHQ1 depletion induces T-ALL cell death in vitro and prolongs animal survival in murine T-ALL models. RNA-Seq reveals that SHQ1 depletion impairs widespread RNA splicing, and MYC is one of the most prominently downregulated genes due to inefficient splicing. MYC overexpression significantly rescues T-ALL cell death resulted from SHQ1 inactivation. We herein report a mechanism of NOTCH1-SHQ1-MYC axis in T-cell leukemogenesis. These findings not only shed light on the role of SHQ1 in RNA splicing and tumorigenesis, but also provide additional insight into MYC regulation
HTLV-1-infected CD4+ T-cells display alternative exon usages that culminate in adult T-cell leukemia
Deregulation of alternative splicing during HTLV-1 infection : role of Tax
Le virus T lymphotropique humain HTLV-1 est l’agent étiologique de la leucémie-lymphome T de l’adulte (ATLL) et de nombreuses maladies inflammatoires. HTLV-1 est associée à de nombreuses modifications quantitatives de l’expression des gènes cellulaires. À ce jour, ces modifications ont été décrites essentiellement à l’échelle transcriptionnelle à travers notamment les effets de l’oncoprotéine virale Tax, et plus récemment HBZ. Outre leurs impacts sur les niveaux d’activité des promoteurs, certains facteurs apparaissent jouer également un rôle dans la régulation de l’épissage alternatif. Ce mécanisme essentiel à la diversité du transcriptome et du protéome cellulaire, apparait étroitement couplé à la transcription et ses dérégulations sont de plus en plus décrites dans les phénomènes cytotoxiques et pathogènes tels que les infections et les cancers. Dans ce contexte, mon travail s’est intéressé à caractériser les profils d’expression des exons des cellules T CD4+ infectées ou non, et transformée ou non par HTLV-1 in vivo. Dans une seconde étude, j’ai abordé les aspects mécanistiques des modifications d’épissage alternatif par HTLV-1. Mes données montrent que, outre ses effets sur la régulation quantitative de l’expression des gènes cellulaires, l’activation de la voie NF-kB par l’oncogène Tax est impliquée dans la reprogrammation de l’épissage alternatif de nombreux gènes. Ces données révèlent un nouveau degré de complexité dans les mécanismes de dérégulation de l’expression des gènes cellulaires par HTLV-1 et ouvre de nouvelles perspectives d’investigations dans la compréhension des processus leucémogènes associés à l’infection par le virus HTLV-1Reprogramming cellular gene transcription sustains HTLV-1 viral persistence that ultimately leads to the development of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). We hypothesized that besides these quantitative transcriptional effects. HTLV-1 quantitatively modifies the pattern of cellular gene expression. Exon expression analysis shows that patients’ untransformed and malignant HTLV-1+ CD4+ T-cells exhibit multiple alternate exon usage (AEU) events. These affect either transcriptionally modified or unmodified genes, culminate in ATLL, and unveil new functional pathways involved in cancer and cell cycle. A total of 486 exon modifications occurred in untransformed infected CD4+ cells were detected in ATLL arguing for a role of AEUs in HTLV-1 leukemogenesis. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of array data permitted to isolate exon expression patters of 3977 exons that discriminate uninfected, infected, and transformed CD4+ T-cells. Exposing cells to splicing inhibitors revealed that Sudemycin E reduces cell viability of HTLV-1 transformed cells without affecting primary control CD4+ cells and HTLV-1 negative cell lines, suggesting that the huge excess of AEU might provides news targets for treating ATLL. Taken together, these data reveal that HTLV-1 significantly modifies the structure of cellular transcripts and unmask new putative leukemogenic pathways and possible therapeutic target
Dérégulation de l'épissage alternatif lors de l'infection par le virus HTLV-1 : rôle de Tax
Reprogramming cellular gene transcription sustains HTLV-1 viral persistence that ultimately leads to the development of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). We hypothesized that besides these quantitative transcriptional effects. HTLV-1 quantitatively modifies the pattern of cellular gene expression. Exon expression analysis shows that patients’ untransformed and malignant HTLV-1+ CD4+ T-cells exhibit multiple alternate exon usage (AEU) events. These affect either transcriptionally modified or unmodified genes, culminate in ATLL, and unveil new functional pathways involved in cancer and cell cycle. A total of 486 exon modifications occurred in untransformed infected CD4+ cells were detected in ATLL arguing for a role of AEUs in HTLV-1 leukemogenesis. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of array data permitted to isolate exon expression patters of 3977 exons that discriminate uninfected, infected, and transformed CD4+ T-cells. Exposing cells to splicing inhibitors revealed that Sudemycin E reduces cell viability of HTLV-1 transformed cells without affecting primary control CD4+ cells and HTLV-1 negative cell lines, suggesting that the huge excess of AEU might provides news targets for treating ATLL. Taken together, these data reveal that HTLV-1 significantly modifies the structure of cellular transcripts and unmask new putative leukemogenic pathways and possible therapeutic targetsLe virus T lymphotropique humain HTLV-1 est l’agent étiologique de la leucémie-lymphome T de l’adulte (ATLL) et de nombreuses maladies inflammatoires. HTLV-1 est associée à de nombreuses modifications quantitatives de l’expression des gènes cellulaires. À ce jour, ces modifications ont été décrites essentiellement à l’échelle transcriptionnelle à travers notamment les effets de l’oncoprotéine virale Tax, et plus récemment HBZ. Outre leurs impacts sur les niveaux d’activité des promoteurs, certains facteurs apparaissent jouer également un rôle dans la régulation de l’épissage alternatif. Ce mécanisme essentiel à la diversité du transcriptome et du protéome cellulaire, apparait étroitement couplé à la transcription et ses dérégulations sont de plus en plus décrites dans les phénomènes cytotoxiques et pathogènes tels que les infections et les cancers. Dans ce contexte, mon travail s’est intéressé à caractériser les profils d’expression des exons des cellules T CD4+ infectées ou non, et transformée ou non par HTLV-1 in vivo. Dans une seconde étude, j’ai abordé les aspects mécanistiques des modifications d’épissage alternatif par HTLV-1. Mes données montrent que, outre ses effets sur la régulation quantitative de l’expression des gènes cellulaires, l’activation de la voie NF-kB par l’oncogène Tax est impliquée dans la reprogrammation de l’épissage alternatif de nombreux gènes. Ces données révèlent un nouveau degré de complexité dans les mécanismes de dérégulation de l’expression des gènes cellulaires par HTLV-1 et ouvre de nouvelles perspectives d’investigations dans la compréhension des processus leucémogènes associés à l’infection par le virus HTLV-
TET-catalyzed 5-carboxylcytosine promotes CTCF binding to suboptimal sequences genome-wide
The mechanisms supporting dynamic regulation of CTCF-binding sites remain poorly understood. Here we describe the TET-catalyzed 5-methylcytosine derivative, 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC), as a factor driving new CTCF binding within genomic DNA. Through a combination of in vivo and in vitro approaches, we reveal that 5caC generally strengthens CTCF association with DNA and facilitates binding to suboptimal sequences. Dramatically, profiling of CTCF binding in a cellular model that accumulates genomic 5caC identified similar to 13,000 new CTCF sites. The new sites were enriched for overlapping 5caC and were marked by an overall reduction in CTCF motif strength. As CTCF has multiple roles in gene expression, these findings have wide-reaching implications and point to induced 5caC as a potential mechanism to achieve differential CTCF binding in cells
Intragenic recruitment of NF-ÎşB drives splicing modifications upon activation by the oncogene Tax of HTLV-1
International audienceChronic NF-ÎşB activation in inflammation and cancer has long been linked to persistent activation of NF-ÎşB-responsive gene promoters. However, NF-ÎşB factors also massively bind to gene bodies. Here, we demonstrate that recruitment of the NF-ÎşB factor RELA to intragenic regions regulates alternative splicing upon NF-ÎşB activation by the viral oncogene Tax of HTLV-1. Integrative analyses of RNA splicing and chromatin occupancy, combined with chromatin tethering assays, demonstrate that DNA-bound RELA interacts with and recruits the splicing regulator DDX17, in an NF-ÎşB activation-dependent manner. This leads to alternative splicing of target exons due to the RNA helicase activity of DDX17. Similar results were obtained upon Tax-independent NF-ÎşB activation, indicating that Tax likely exacerbates a physiological process where RELA provides splice target specificity. Collectively, our results demonstrate a physical and direct involvement of NF-ÎşB in alternative splicing regulation, which significantly revisits our knowledge of HTLV-1 pathogenesis and other NF-ÎşB-related diseases
Aging of preleukemic thymocytes drives CpG island hypermethylation in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Cancer cells display DNA hypermethylation at specific CpG islands in comparison to their normal healthy counterparts, but the mechanism that drives this so-called CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) remains poorly understood. Here, we show that CpG island methylation in human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) mainly occurs at promoters of Polycomb Repressor Complex 2 (PRC2) target genes that are not expressed in normal or malignant T-cells and which display a reciprocal association with H3K27me3 binding. In addition, we revealed that this aberrant methylation profile reflects the epigenetic history of T-ALL and is established already in pre-leukemic, self-renewing thymocytes that precede T-ALL development. Finally, we unexpectedly uncover that this age-related CpG island hypermethylation signature in T-ALL is completely resistant to the FDA-approved hypomethylating agent Decitabine. Altogether, we here provide conceptual evidence for the involvement of a pre-leukemic phase characterized by self-renewing thymocytes in the pathogenesis of human T-ALL
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