Genome Biology (Oct 2021)

KrasG12D induces changes in chromatin territories that differentially impact early nuclear reprogramming in pancreatic cells

  • Angela J. Mathison,
  • Romica Kerketta,
  • Thiago Milech de Assuncao,
  • Elise Leverence,
  • Atefeh Zeighami,
  • Guillermo Urrutia,
  • Timothy J. Stodola,
  • Marina Pasca di Magliano,
  • Juan L. Iovanna,
  • Michael T. Zimmermann,
  • Gwen Lomberk,
  • Raul Urrutia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-021-02498-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 29

Abstract

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Abstract Background Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma initiation is most frequently caused by Kras mutations. Results Here, we apply biological, biochemical, and network biology methods to validate GEMM-derived cell models using inducible KrasG12D expression. We describe the time-dependent, chromatin remodeling program that impacts function during early oncogenic signaling. We find that the KrasG12D-induced transcriptional response is dominated by downregulated expression concordant with layers of epigenetic events. More open chromatin characterizes the ATAC-seq profile associated with a smaller group of upregulated genes and epigenetic marks. RRBS demonstrates that promoter hypermethylation does not account for the silencing of the extensive gene promoter network. Moreover, ChIP-Seq reveals that heterochromatin reorganization plays little role in this early transcriptional program. Notably, both gene activation and silencing primarily depend on the marking of genes with a combination of H3K27ac, H3K4me3, and H3K36me3. Indeed, integrated modeling of all these datasets shows that KrasG12D regulates its transcriptional program primarily through unique super-enhancers and enhancers, and marking specific gene promoters and bodies. We also report chromatin remodeling across genomic areas that, although not contributing directly to cis-gene transcription, are likely important for KrasG12D functions. Conclusions In summary, we report a comprehensive, time-dependent, and coordinated early epigenomic program for KrasG12D in pancreatic cells, which is mechanistically relevant to understanding chromatin remodeling events underlying transcriptional outcomes needed for the function of this oncogene.

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