Aberrant MYCN expression drives oncogenic hijacking of EZH2 as a transcriptional activator in peripheral T cell lymphoma.
Marlies Vanden BemptKoen DebackereSofie DemeyerQuentin Van ThilloNienke MeeuwsCristina Prieto FernandezSarah ProvostNicole MentensKris JacobsOlga GielenDavid NittnerSeishi OgawaKeisuke KataokaCarlos GrauxThomas A TousseynJan CoolsDaan DierickxPublished in: Blood (2022)
Peripheral T cell lymphoma (PTCL) is a heterogeneous group of hematological cancers arising from the malignant transformation of mature T cells. In a cohort of 28 PTCL cases, we identified recurrent overexpression of MYCN, a member of the MYC family of oncogenic transcription factors. Approximately half of all PTCL cases was characterized by a MYC expression signature. Inducible expression of MYCN in lymphoid cells in a mouse model caused T cell lymphoma that recapitulated human PTCL with a MYC expression signature. Integration of mouse and human expression data identified EZH2 as a key downstream target of MYCN. Remarkably, EZH2 was found to be an essential co-factor for the transcriptional activation of the MYCN-driven gene expression program, which was independent of methyltransferase activity, but dependent on phosphorylation by CDK1. MYCN-driven T cell lymphoma was sensitive to EZH2 degradation or CDK1 inhibition, which displayed synergy with FDA-approved HDAC inhibitors.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- poor prognosis
- gene expression
- long non coding rna
- mouse model
- endothelial cells
- binding protein
- cell proliferation
- machine learning
- oxidative stress
- immune response
- signaling pathway
- electronic health record
- inflammatory response
- protein kinase
- data analysis
- heat shock
- genome wide identification