HDAC8-mediated inhibition of EP300 drives a transcriptional state that increases melanoma brain metastasis.
Michael F EmmonsRichard L BennettAlberto RivaKanchan GuptaLarissa Anastasio Da Costa CarvalhoChao ZhangRobert J B MacaulayDaphne Dupéré-RichérBin FangEdward SetoJohn M KoomenJiannong LiYian Ann ChenPeter A ForsythJonathan D LichtKeiran S M SmalleyPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Melanomas can adopt multiple transcriptional states. Little is known about the epigenetic drivers of these cell states, limiting our ability to regulate melanoma heterogeneity. Here, we identify stress-induced HDAC8 activity as driving melanoma brain metastasis development. Exposure of melanocytes and melanoma cells to multiple stresses increases HDAC8 activation leading to a neural crest-stem cell transcriptional state and an amoeboid, invasive phenotype that increases seeding to the brain. Using ATAC-Seq and ChIP-Seq we show that increased HDAC8 activity alters chromatin structure by increasing H3K27ac and enhancing accessibility at c-Jun binding sites. Functionally, HDAC8 deacetylates the histone acetyltransferase EP300, causing its enzymatic inactivation. This, in turn, increases binding of EP300 to Jun-transcriptional sites and decreases binding to MITF-transcriptional sites. Inhibition of EP300 increases melanoma cell invasion, resistance to stress and increases melanoma brain metastasis development. HDAC8 is identified as a mediator of transcriptional co-factor inactivation and chromatin accessibility that drives brain metastasis.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- resting state
- stress induced
- histone deacetylase
- white matter
- single cell
- stem cells
- functional connectivity
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- skin cancer
- heat shock
- dna damage
- rna seq
- cell therapy
- high throughput
- dna binding
- mesenchymal stem cells
- basal cell carcinoma
- sensitive detection
- oxidative stress