Pluto Bioinformatics

GSE95013 (mouse): AICDA-induced epigenetic plasticity accelerates germinal center-derived lymphomagenesis

Bulk RNA sequencing

Epigenetic heterogeneity is emerging as a significant phenotypic feature of tumors. In diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs), increased cytosine methylation heterogeneity is associated with poor clinical outcome, yet the biological mechanisms driving epigenetic heterogeneity remain unclear. Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AICDA), an enzyme that deaminates and facilitates demethylation of DNA methyl-cytosines in germinal center (GC) B-cells, is required for DLBCL pathogenesis and linked to inferior clinical outcomes. Here, we show that overexpression of AICDA causes more aggressive disease and worse outcome in BCL2-driven murine lymphomas. This phenotype was associated with significantly increased focal inter-tumor and intra-tumor cytosine methylation heterogeneity as compared to control lymphomas, but not with increased mutational burden. AICDA-mediated epigenetic heterogeneity was accompanied by DNA hypomethylation. Reciprocally, we observed that the focal inter-individual and intra-individual cytosine methylation heterogeneity characteristic of normal GC B-cells was lost upon depletion of AICDA. There was significant overlap of AICDA-induced methylation heterogeneity foci in GC B-cells and murine lymphomas. These observations are relevant to human patients, since DLBCLs with high AICDA expression likewise manifest extensive increases in focal inter-patient and intra-patient heterogeneity as compared to DLBCLs with low AICDA expression. Affected regions significantly overlapped with those found in murine AICDA-overexpressing lymphomas. Our results identify AICDA as a novel source of epigenetic plasticity and heterogeneity in B-cell lymphomas with potential significance for other tumors that express cytosine deaminases. SOURCE: Matt Teater (mrt2001@med.cornell.edu) - Weill Cornell Medical College

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