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Browsing by Subject "Histone methylation"

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    Epigenetic response to environmental stress: Assembly of BRG1–G9a/GLP–DNMT3 repressive chromatin complex on Myh6 promoter in pathologically stressed hearts
    (Elsevier, 2016-03-04) Han, Pei; Li, Wei; Yang, Jin; Shang, Ching; Lin, Chiou-Hong; Cheng, Wei; Hang, Calvin T.; Cheng, Hsiu-Ling; Chen, Chen-Hao; Wong, Johnson; Xiong, Yiqin; Zhao, Mingming; Drakos, Stavros G.; Ghetti, Andrea; Li, Dean Y.; Bernstein, Daniel; Chen, Huei-sheng Vincent; Quertermous, Thomas; Chang, Ching-Pin; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Chromatin structure is determined by nucleosome positioning, histone modifications, and DNA methylation. How chromatin modifications are coordinately altered under pathological conditions remains elusive. Here we describe a stress-activated mechanism of concerted chromatin modification in the heart. In mice, pathological stress activates cardiomyocytes to express Brg1 (nucleosome-remodeling factor), G9a/Glp (histone methyltransferase), and Dnmt3 (DNA methyltransferase). Once activated, Brg1 recruits G9a and then Dnmt3 to sequentially assemble repressive chromatin—marked by H3K9 and CpG methylation—on a key molecular motor gene (Myh6), thereby silencing Myh6 and impairing cardiac contraction. Disruption of Brg1, G9a or Dnmt3 erases repressive chromatin marks and de-represses Myh6, reducing stress-induced cardiac dysfunction. In human hypertrophic hearts, BRG1–G9a/GLP–DNMT3 complex is also activated; its level correlates with H3K9/CpG methylation, Myh6 repression, and cardiomyopathy. Our studies demonstrate a new mechanism of chromatin assembly in stressed hearts and novel therapeutic targets for restoring Myh6 and ventricular function. The stress-induced Brg1–G9a–Dnmt3 interactions and sequence of repressive chromatin assembly on Myh6 illustrates a molecular mechanism by which the heart epigenetically responds to environmental signals. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Cardiomyocyte Biology: Integration of Developmental and Environmental Cues in the Heart edited by Marcus Schaub and Hughes Abriel.
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    Histone Methylation by SETD1A Protects Nascent DNA through the Nucleosome Chaperone Activity of FANCD2
    (Cell Press, 2018-07-05) Higgs, Martin R.; Sato, Koichi; Reynolds, John J.; Begum, Shabana; Bayley, Rachel; Goula, Amalia; Vernet, Audrey; Paquin, Karissa L.; Skalnik, David G.; Kobayashi, Wataru; Takata, Minoru; Howlett, Niall G.; Kurumizaka, Hitoshi; Kimura, Hiroshi; Stewart, Grant S.; Biology, School of Science
    Components of the Fanconi anemia and homologous recombination pathways play a vital role in protecting newly replicated DNA from uncontrolled nucleolytic degradation, safeguarding genome stability. Here we report that histone methylation by the lysine methyltransferase SETD1A is crucial for protecting stalled replication forks from deleterious resection. Depletion of SETD1A sensitizes cells to replication stress and leads to uncontrolled DNA2-dependent resection of damaged replication forks. The ability of SETD1A to prevent degradation of these structures is mediated by its ability to catalyze methylation on Lys4 of histone H3 (H3K4) at replication forks, which enhances FANCD2-dependent histone chaperone activity. Suppressing H3K4 methylation or expression of a chaperone-defective FANCD2 mutant leads to loss of RAD51 nucleofilament stability and severe nucleolytic degradation of replication forks. Our work identifies epigenetic modification and histone mobility as critical regulatory mechanisms in maintaining genome stability by restraining nucleases from irreparably damaging stalled replication forks.
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    HOXA9 Reprograms the Enhancer Landscape to Promote Leukemogenesis
    (Elsevier, 2018-10-08) Sun, Yuqing; Zhou, Bo; Mao, Fengbiao; Xu, Jing; Miao, Hongzhi; Zou, Zhenhua; Khoa, Le Tran Phuc; Jang, Younghoon; Cai, Sheng; Witkin, Matthew; Koche, Richard; Ge, Kai; Dressler, Gregory; Levine, Ross L.; Armstrong, Scott A.; Dou, Yali; Hess, Jay L.; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine
    Aberrant expression of HOXA9 is a prominent feature of acute leukemia driven by diverse oncogenes. Here we show that HOXA9 overexpression in myeloid and B progenitor cells leads to significant enhancer reorganizations with prominent emergence of leukemia-specific de novo enhancers. Alterations in the enhancer landscape lead to activation of an ectopic embryonic gene program. We show that HOXA9 functions as a pioneer factor at de novo enhancers and recruits CEBPα and the MLL3/MLL4 complex. Genetic deletion of MLL3/MLL4 blocks histone H3K4 methylation at de novo enhancers and inhibits HOXA9/MEIS1-mediated leukemogenesis in vivo. These results suggest that therapeutic targeting of HOXA9-dependent enhancer reorganization can be an effective therapeutic strategy in acute leukemia with HOXA9 overexpression
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    PRMT1 promotes pancreatic cancer development and resistance to chemotherapy
    (Elsevier, 2024) Ku, Bomin; Eisenbarth, David; Baek, Seonguk; Jeong, Tae-Keun; Kang, Ju-Gyeong; Hwang, Daehee; Noh, Myung-Giun; Choi, Chan; Choi, Sungwoo; Seol, Taejun; Kim, Yun-Hee; Woo, Sang Myung; Kong, Sun-Young; Lim, Dae-Sik; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains one of the most lethal types of cancer, and novel treatment regimens are direly needed. Epigenetic regulation contributes to the development of various cancer types, but its role in the development of and potential as a therapeutic target for PDAC remains underexplored. Here, we show that PRMT1 is highly expressed in murine and human pancreatic cancer and is essential for cancer cell proliferation and tumorigenesis. Deletion of PRMT1 delays pancreatic cancer development in a KRAS-dependent mouse model, and multi-omics analyses reveal that PRMT1 depletion leads to global changes in chromatin accessibility and transcription, resulting in reduced glycolysis and a decrease in tumorigenic capacity. Pharmacological inhibition of PRMT1 in combination with gemcitabine has a synergistic effect on pancreatic tumor growth in vitro and in vivo. Collectively, our findings implicate PRMT1 as a key regulator of pancreatic cancer development and a promising target for combination therapy.
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