eLife (Dec 2021)

Analysis of long and short enhancers in melanoma cell states

  • David Mauduit,
  • Ibrahim Ihsan Taskiran,
  • Liesbeth Minnoye,
  • Maxime de Waegeneer,
  • Valerie Christiaens,
  • Gert Hulselmans,
  • Jonas Demeulemeester,
  • Jasper Wouters,
  • Stein Aerts

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.71735
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Understanding how enhancers drive cell-type specificity and efficiently identifying them is essential for the development of innovative therapeutic strategies. In melanoma, the melanocytic (MEL) and the mesenchymal-like (MES) states present themselves with different responses to therapy, making the identification of specific enhancers highly relevant. Using massively parallel reporter assays (MPRAs) in a panel of patient-derived melanoma lines (MM lines), we set to identify and decipher melanoma enhancers by first focusing on regions with state-specific H3K27 acetylation close to differentially expressed genes. An in-depth evaluation of those regions was then pursued by investigating the activity of overlapping ATAC-seq peaks along with a full tiling of the acetylated regions with 190 bp sequences. Activity was observed in more than 60% of the selected regions, and we were able to precisely locate the active enhancers within ATAC-seq peaks. Comparison of sequence content with activity, using the deep learning model DeepMEL2, revealed that AP-1 alone is responsible for the MES enhancer activity. In contrast, SOX10 and MITF both influence MEL enhancer function with SOX10 being required to achieve high levels of activity. Overall, our MPRAs shed light on the relationship between long and short sequences in terms of their sequence content, enhancer activity, and specificity across melanoma cell states.

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