KDM6A Regulates Immune Response Genes in Multiple Myeloma.
Daphne Dupéré-RicherAlberto RivaBenjamin G BarwickSayantan MajiHeidi Casellas RomanJianping LiUmasankar DeAmin SobhGabrielle QuickstadCrissandra PiperMarta KulisTeresa EzpondaJosé-Ignacio Ignacio Martín-SuberoGiovanni TononWeizhou ZhangConstantine S MitsiadesLawrence H BoiseRichard L BennettJonathan D LichtPublished in: Blood (2024)
The histone H3K27 demethylase KDM6A is a tumor suppressor in multiple cancers, including multiple myeloma (MM). We created isogenic MM cells disrupted for KDM6A and tagged the endogenous protein to facilitate genome wide studies. KDM6A binds genes associated with immune recognition and cytokine signaling. Most importantly, KDM6A binds and activates NLRC5 and CIITA encoding regulators of Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) genes. Patient data indicate that NLRC5 and CIITA, are downregulated in MM with low KDM6A expression. Chromatin analysis shows that KDM6A binds poised and active enhancers and KDM6A loss led to decreased H3K27ac at enhancers, increased H3K27me3 levels in body of genes bound by KDM6A and decreased gene expression. Reestablishing histone acetylation with an HDAC3 inhibitor leads to upregulation of MHC expression, offering a strategy to restore immunogenicity of KDM6A deficient tumors. Loss of Kdm6a in murine RAS-transformed fibroblasts led to increased growth in vivo associated with decreased T cell infiltration.