Defining a Correlative Transcriptional Signature Associated with Bulk Histone H3 Acetylation Levels in Adult Glioblastomas.
Irati Hervás-CorpiónJorge Navarro-CalvoPaula Martín-ClimentMarianela Iriarte-GaheteNoelia Geribaldi-DoldánCarmen CastroLuis M ValorPublished in: Cells (2023)
Glioblastoma (GB) is the most prevalent primary brain cancer and the most aggressive form of glioma because of its poor prognosis and high recurrence. To confirm the importance of epigenetics in glioma, we explored The Cancer Gene Atlas (TCGA) database and we found that several histone/DNA modifications and chromatin remodeling factors were affected at transcriptional and genetic levels in GB compared to lower-grade gliomas. We associated these alterations in our own cohort of study with a significant reduction in the bulk levels of acetylated lysines 9 and 14 of histone H3 in high-grade compared to low-grade tumors. Within GB, we performed an RNA-seq analysis between samples exhibiting the lowest and highest levels of acetylated H3 in the cohort; these results are in general concordance with the transcriptional changes obtained after histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibition of GB-derived cultures that affected relevant genes in glioma biology and treatment (e.g., A2ML1, CD83 , SLC17A7, TNFSF18 ). Overall, we identified a transcriptional signature linked to histone acetylation that was potentially associated with good prognosis, i.e., high overall survival and low rate of somatic mutations in epigenetically related genes in GB. Our study identifies lysine acetylation as a key defective histone modification in adult high-grade glioma, and offers novel insights regarding the use of HDAC inhibitors in therapy.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- histone deacetylase
- low grade
- genome wide
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- single cell
- papillary thyroid
- copy number
- long non coding rna
- childhood cancer
- heat shock
- squamous cell
- squamous cell carcinoma
- emergency department
- dna damage
- stem cells
- young adults
- long noncoding rna
- nk cells
- genome wide analysis