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112


Identifying synergistic high-order 3D chromatin conformations from genome-scale nanopore concatemer sequencing

Deshpande, Aditya S; Ulahannan, Netha; Pendleton, Matthew; Dai, Xiaoguang; Ly, Lynn; Behr, Julie M; Schwenk, Stefan; Liao, Will; Augello, Michael A; Tyer, Carly; Rughani, Priyesh; Kudman, Sarah; Tian, Huasong; Otis, Hannah G; Adney, Emily; Wilkes, David; Mosquera, Juan Miguel; Barbieri, Christopher E; Melnick, Ari; Stoddart, David; Turner, Daniel J; Juul, Sissel; Harrington, Eoghan; Imieliński, Marcin
High-order three-dimensional (3D) interactions between more than two genomic loci are common in human chromatin, but their role in gene regulation is unclear. Previous high-order 3D chromatin assays either measure distant interactions across the genome or proximal interactions at selected targets. To address this gap, we developed Pore-C, which combines chromatin conformation capture with nanopore sequencing of concatemers to profile proximal high-order chromatin contacts at the genome scale. We also developed the statistical method Chromunity to identify sets of genomic loci with frequencies of high-order contacts significantly higher than background ('synergies'). Applying these methods to human cell lines, we found that synergies were enriched in enhancers and promoters in active chromatin and in highly transcribed and lineage-defining genes. In prostate cancer cells, these included binding sites of androgen-driven transcription factors and the promoters of androgen-regulated genes. Concatemers of high-order contacts in highly expressed genes were demethylated relative to pairwise contacts at the same loci. Synergies in breast cancer cells were associated with tyfonas, a class of complex DNA amplicons. These results rigorously link genome-wide high-order 3D interactions to lineage-defining transcriptional programs and establish Pore-C and Chromunity as scalable approaches to assess high-order genome structure.
PMID: 35637420
ISSN: 1546-1696
CID: 5270402

Recurrent somatic mutations as predictors of immunotherapy response

Gajic, Zoran Z; Deshpande, Aditya; Legut, Mateusz; Imieliński, Marcin; Sanjana, Neville E
Immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) has transformed the treatment of metastatic cancer but is hindered by variable response rates. A key unmet need is the identification of biomarkers that predict treatment response. To address this, we analyzed six whole exome sequencing cohorts with matched disease outcomes to identify genes and pathways predictive of ICB response. To increase detection power, we focus on genes and pathways that are significantly mutated following correction for epigenetic, replication timing, and sequence-based covariates. Using this technique, we identify several genes (BCLAF1, KRAS, BRAF, and TP53) and pathways (MAPK signaling, p53 associated, and immunomodulatory) as predictors of ICB response and develop the Cancer Immunotherapy Response CLassifiEr (CIRCLE). Compared to tumor mutational burden alone, CIRCLE led to superior prediction of ICB response with a 10.5% increase in sensitivity and a 11% increase in specificity. We envision that CIRCLE and more broadly the analysis of recurrently mutated cancer genes will pave the way for better prognostic tools for cancer immunotherapy.
PMCID:9270330
PMID: 35803911
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5270412

SETD2 Haploinsufficiency Enhances Germinal Center-Associated AICDA Somatic Hypermutation to Drive B-cell Lymphomagenesis

Leung, Wilfred; Teater, Matt; Durmaz, Ceyda; Meydan, Cem; Chivu, Alexandra G; Chadburn, Amy; Rice, Edward J; Muley, Ashlesha; Camarillo, Jeannie M; Arivalagan, Jaison; Li, Ziyi; Flowers, Christopher R; Kelleher, Neil L; Danko, Charles G; Imielinski, Marcin; Dave, Sandeep S; Armstrong, Scott A; Mason, Christopher E; Melnick, Ari M
SETD2 is the sole histone methyltransferase responsible for H3K36me3, with roles in splicing, transcription initiation, and DNA damage response. Homozygous disruption of SETD2 yields a tumor suppressor effect in various cancers. However, SETD2 mutation is typically heterozygous in diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. Here we show that heterozygous Setd2 deficiency results in germinal center (GC) hyperplasia and increased competitive fitness, with reduced DNA damage checkpoint activity and apoptosis, resulting in accelerated lymphomagenesis. Impaired DNA damage sensing in Setd2-haploinsufficient germinal center B (GCB) and lymphoma cells associated with increased AICDA-induced somatic hypermutation, complex structural variants, and increased translocations including those activating MYC. DNA damage was selectively increased on the nontemplate strand, and H3K36me3 loss was associated with greater RNAPII processivity and mutational burden, suggesting that SETD2-mediated H3K36me3 is required for proper sensing of cytosine deamination. Hence, Setd2 haploinsufficiency delineates a novel GCB context-specific oncogenic pathway involving defective epigenetic surveillance of AICDA-mediated effects on transcribed genes.
PMCID:9262862
PMID: 35443279
ISSN: 2159-8290
CID: 5270382

Somatic whole genome dynamics of precancer in Barrett's esophagus reveals features associated with disease progression

Paulson, Thomas G; Galipeau, Patricia C; Oman, Kenji M; Sanchez, Carissa A; Kuhner, Mary K; Smith, Lucian P; Hadi, Kevin; Shah, Minita; Arora, Kanika; Shelton, Jennifer; Johnson, Molly; Corvelo, Andre; Maley, Carlo C; Yao, Xiaotong; Sanghvi, Rashesh; Venturini, Elisa; Emde, Anne-Katrin; Hubert, Benjamin; Imielinski, Marcin; Robine, Nicolas; Reid, Brian J; Li, Xiaohong
While the genomes of normal tissues undergo dynamic changes over time, little is understood about the temporal-spatial dynamics of genomes in premalignant tissues that progress to cancer compared to those that remain cancer-free. Here we use whole genome sequencing to contrast genomic alterations in 427 longitudinal samples from 40 patients with stable Barrett's esophagus compared to 40 Barrett's patients who progressed to esophageal adenocarcinoma (ESAD). We show the same somatic mutational processes are active in Barrett's tissue regardless of outcome, with high levels of mutation, ESAD gene and focal chromosomal alterations, and similar mutational signatures. The critical distinction between stable Barrett's versus those who progress to cancer is acquisition and expansion of TP53-/- cell populations having complex structural variants and high-level amplifications, which are detectable up to six years prior to a cancer diagnosis. These findings reveal the timing of common somatic genome dynamics in stable Barrett's esophagus and define key genomic features specific to progression to esophageal adenocarcinoma, both of which are critical for cancer prevention and early detection strategies.
PMCID:9050715
PMID: 35484108
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5270392

System-wide transcriptome damage and tissue identity loss in COVID-19 patients

Park, Jiwoon; Foox, Jonathan; Hether, Tyler; Danko, David C; Warren, Sarah; Kim, Youngmi; Reeves, Jason; Butler, Daniel J; Mozsary, Christopher; Rosiene, Joel; Shaiber, Alon; Afshin, Evan E; MacKay, Matthew; Rendeiro, André F; Bram, Yaron; Chandar, Vasuretha; Geiger, Heather; Craney, Arryn; Velu, Priya; Melnick, Ari M; Hajirasouliha, Iman; Beheshti, Afshin; Taylor, Deanne; Saravia-Butler, Amanda; Singh, Urminder; Wurtele, Eve Syrkin; Schisler, Jonathan; Fennessey, Samantha; Corvelo, André; Zody, Michael C; Germer, Soren; Salvatore, Steven; Levy, Shawn; Wu, Shixiu; Tatonetti, Nicholas P; Shapira, Sagi; Salvatore, Mirella; Westblade, Lars F; Cushing, Melissa; Rennert, Hanna; Kriegel, Alison J; Elemento, Olivier; Imielinski, Marcin; Rice, Charles M; Borczuk, Alain C; Meydan, Cem; Schwartz, Robert E; Mason, Christopher E
The molecular mechanisms underlying the clinical manifestations of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and what distinguishes them from common seasonal influenza virus and other lung injury states such as acute respiratory distress syndrome, remain poorly understood. To address these challenges, we combine transcriptional profiling of 646 clinical nasopharyngeal swabs and 39 patient autopsy tissues to define body-wide transcriptome changes in response to COVID-19. We then match these data with spatial protein and expression profiling across 357 tissue sections from 16 representative patient lung samples and identify tissue-compartment-specific damage wrought by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, evident as a function of varying viral loads during the clinical course of infection and tissue-type-specific expression states. Overall, our findings reveal a systemic disruption of canonical cellular and transcriptional pathways across all tissues, which can inform subsequent studies to combat the mortality of COVID-19 and to better understand the molecular dynamics of lethal SARS-CoV-2 and other respiratory infections.
PMCID:8784611
PMID: 35233546
ISSN: 2666-3791
CID: 5270372

Fanconi anemia pathway deficiency drives copy number variation in squamous cell carcinoma. [Meeting Abstract]

Webster, Andrew L.; Sanders, Mathijs A.; Patel, Krupa; Dietrich, Ralf; Noonan, Raymond J.; Lach, Francis P.; White, Ryan R.; Goldfarb, Audrey M.; Hadi, Kevin; Edwards, Matthew M.; Donovan, Frank X.; Jung, Moonjung; Sridhar, Sunandini; Fedrigo, Olivier; Tian, Huasong; Rosiene, Joel; Heineman, Thomas; Kennedy, Jennifer; Bean, Lorenzo; Rosti, Rasim O.; Tryon, Rebecca; Gonzalez, Ashlyn-Maree; Rosenberg, Allana; Luo, Ji-Dung; Carrol, Thomas; Velleuer, Eunike; Rastatter, Jeff C.; Wells, Susanne I.; Surralles, Jordi; Bagby, Grover; MacMillan, Margaret L.; Wagner, John E.; Cancio, Maria; Boulad, Farid; Scognamiglio, Theresa; Vaughan, Roger; Koren, Amnon; Imielinski, Marcin; Chandrasekharappa, Settara; Auerbach, Arleen D.; Singh, Bhuvanesh; Kutler, David; Campbell, Peter J.; Smogorzewska, Agata
ISI:000892509501255
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 5459432

Team architecture in 3D genomic interactions revealed through nanopore sequencing [Editorial]

Imielinski, Marcin; Deshpande, Aditya
ISI:000804538200001
ISSN: 1087-0156
CID: 5270842

Genomic instability is enriched in localized prostate cancers from men of African ancestry. [Meeting Abstract]

Nauseef, Jones T.; Shah, Yajas; Shaiber, Alon; Rosiene, Joel; Wilkes, David; Sigouros, Michael; Manohar, Jyothi; Vlachostergios, Panagiotis J.; Robinson, Brian D.; Elemento, Olivier; Nanus, David M.; Mosquera, Juan Miguel; Imielinski, Marcin
ISI:000771008900275
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 5270802

Pathognomonic long molecule footprints of backup repair pathways in homologous recombination deficient cancers [Meeting Abstract]

Setton, Jeremy; Hadi, Kevin; Tian, Huasong; Paula, Arnaud Da Cruz; Rosiene, Joel; Choo, Zi-Ning; Behr, Julie; Yao, Xiaotong; Elemento, Olivier; Weigelt, Britta; Riaz, Nadeem; Reis-Filho, Jorge S.; Imielinski, Marcin; Powell, Simon N.
ISI:000772647600362
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 5270812

Discovery of Candidate DNA Methylation Cancer Driver Genes

Pan, Heng; Renaud, Loïc; Chaligne, Ronan; Bloehdorn, Johannes; Tausch, Eugen; Mertens, Daniel; Fink, Anna Maria; Fischer, Kirsten; Zhang, Chao; Betel, Doron; Gnirke, Andreas; Imielinski, Marcin; Moreaux, Jérôme; Hallek, Michael; Meissner, Alexander; Stilgenbauer, Stephan; Wu, Catherine J; Elemento, Olivier; Landau, Dan A
Epigenetic alterations, such as promoter hypermethylation, may drive cancer through tumor suppressor gene inactivation. However, we have limited ability to differentiate driver DNA methylation (DNAme) changes from passenger events. We developed DNAme driver inference-MethSig-accounting for the varying stochastic hypermethylation rate across the genome and between samples. We applied MethSig to bisulfite sequencing data of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), multiple myeloma, ductal carcinoma in situ, glioblastoma, and to methylation array data across 18 tumor types in TCGA. MethSig resulted in well-calibrated quantile-quantile plots and reproducible inference of likely DNAme drivers with increased sensitivity/specificity compared with benchmarked methods. CRISPR/Cas9 knockout of selected candidate CLL DNAme drivers provided a fitness advantage with and without therapeutic intervention. Notably, DNAme driver risk score was closely associated with adverse outcome in independent CLL cohorts. Collectively, MethSig represents a novel inference framework for DNAme driver discovery to chart the role of aberrant DNAme in cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: MethSig provides a novel statistical framework for the analysis of DNA methylation changes in cancer, to specifically identify candidate DNA methylation driver genes of cancer progression and relapse, empowering the discovery of epigenetic mechanisms that enhance cancer cell fitness.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2113.
PMCID:8419066
PMID: 33972312
ISSN: 2159-8290
CID: 5270362