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Neuroblastoma is composed of two super-enhancer-associated differentiation states.

Tim van GroningenJan KosterLinda J ValentijnDanny A ZwijnenburgNurdan AkogulNancy E HasseltMarloes BroekmansFranciska HaneveldNatalia E NowakowskaJohannes BrasCarel J M van NoeselAldo JongejanAntoine H C van KampenLinda KosterFrank BaasLianne van Dijk-KerkhovenMargriet Huizer-SmitMaria C LeccaAlvin ChanArjan LakemanPiet MolenaarRichard VolckmannEllen M WesterhoutMohamed HamdiPeter G van SluisMarli E EbusJan J MolenaarGodelieve A TytgatBart A WestermanJohan van NesRogier Versteeg
Published in: Nature genetics (2017)
Neuroblastoma and other pediatric tumors show a paucity of gene mutations, which has sparked an interest in their epigenetic regulation. Several tumor types include phenotypically divergent cells, resembling cells from different lineage development stages. It has been proposed that super-enhancer-associated transcription factor (TF) networks underlie lineage identity, but the role of these enhancers in intratumoral heterogeneity is unknown. Here we show that most neuroblastomas include two types of tumor cells with divergent gene expression profiles. Undifferentiated mesenchymal cells and committed adrenergic cells can interconvert and resemble cells from different lineage differentiation stages. ChIP-seq analysis of isogenic pairs of mesenchymal and adrenergic cells identified a distinct super-enhancer landscape and super-enhancer-associated TF network for each cell type. Expression of the mesenchymal TF PRRX1 could reprogram the super-enhancer and mRNA landscapes of adrenergic cells toward a mesenchymal state. Mesenchymal cells were more chemoresistant in vitro and were enriched in post-therapy and relapse tumors. Two super-enhancer-associated TF networks, which probably mediate lineage control in normal development, thus dominate epigenetic control of neuroblastoma and shape intratumoral heterogeneity.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • transcription factor
  • cell cycle arrest
  • stem cells
  • single cell
  • binding protein
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • signaling pathway
  • oxidative stress
  • poor prognosis
  • free survival
  • childhood cancer