macroH2A2 antagonizes epigenetic programs of stemness in glioblastoma

Self-renewal is a crucial property of glioblastoma cells that is enabled by the choreographed functions of chromatin regulators and transcription factors. Identifying targetable epigenetic mechanisms of self-renewal could therefore represent an important step toward developing effective treatments f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nikolic, A, Maule, F, Bobyn, A, Ellestad, K, Paik, S, Marhon, SA, Mehdipour, P, Lun, X, Chen, H-M, Mallard, C, Hay, AJ, Johnston, MJ, Gafuik, CJ, Zemp, FJ, Shen, Y, Ninkovic, N, Osz, K, Labit, E, Berger, ND, Brownsey, DK, Kelly, JJ, Biernaskie, J, Dirks, PB, Derksen, DJ, Jones, SJM, Senger, DL, Chan, JA, Mahoney, DJ, De Carvalho, DD, Gallo, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2023
Description
Summary:Self-renewal is a crucial property of glioblastoma cells that is enabled by the choreographed functions of chromatin regulators and transcription factors. Identifying targetable epigenetic mechanisms of self-renewal could therefore represent an important step toward developing effective treatments for this universally lethal cancer. Here we uncover an epigenetic axis of self-renewal mediated by the histone variant macroH2A2. With omics and functional assays deploying patient-derived in vitro and in vivo models, we show that macroH2A2 shapes chromatin accessibility at enhancer elements to antagonize transcriptional programs of self-renewal. macroH2A2 also sensitizes cells to small molecule-mediated cell death via activation of a viral mimicry response. Consistent with these results, our analyses of clinical cohorts indicate that high transcriptional levels of this histone variant are associated with better prognosis of high-grade glioma patients. Our results reveal a targetable epigenetic mechanism of self-renewal controlled by macroH2A2 and suggest additional treatment approaches for glioblastoma patients.