DNA and histone modifications exhibit noticeable impacts on gene expression 1 . Being the most prevalent internal modification in mRNA, N 6 -Methyladenosine (m 6 A) mRNA modification emerges as an important post-transcriptional mechanism of gene regulation 2 - 4 and plays critical roles in various normal and pathological bioprocesses 5 - 12 . However, how m 6 A is precisely and dynamically deposited in the transcriptome remains elusive. Here we report that H3K36me3 histone modification, a marker for transcription elongation, globally guides m 6 A modification. We found that m 6 A modifications enrich in the vicinity of H3K36me3 peaks, and are reduced globally when cellular H3K36me3 is depleted. Mechanistically, H3K36me3 is recognized and bound directly by METTL14, a critical component of the m 6 A methyltransferase complex (MTC), which in turn facilitates the binding of the m 6 A MTC to adjacent RNA polymerase II, and thereby delivering the m 6 A MTC to actively transcribed nascent RNAs to deposit m 6 A co-transcriptionally. In mouse embryonic stem cells, phenocopying Mettl14 silencing, H3K36me3 depletion also induces m 6 A reduction transcriptome-wide and in pluripotency transcripts, resulting in increased cell stemness. Collectively, our studies reveal the critical roles of H3K36me3 and METTL14 in determining precise and dynamic m 6 A deposition in mRNA, and uncover another layer of gene expression regulation involving crosstalk between histone modification and RNA methylation.
Earlier in the past century, infections were regarded as the most likely cause of childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (pB-ALL). However, there is a lack of relevant biologic evidence supporting this hypothesis. We present in vivo genetic evidence mechanistically connecting inherited susceptibility to pB-ALL and postnatal infections by showing that pB-ALL was initiated in Pax5 heterozygous mice only when they were exposed to common pathogens. Strikingly, these murine pB-ALLs closely resemble the human disease. Tumor exome sequencing revealed activating somatic, nonsynonymous mutations of Jak3 as a second hit. Transplantation experiments and deep sequencing suggest that inactivating mutations in Pax5 promote leukemogenesis by creating an aberrant progenitor compartment that is susceptible to malignant transformation through accumulation of secondary Jak3 mutations. Thus, treatment of Pax5 +/− leukemic cells with specifi c JAK1/3 inhibitors resulted in increased apoptosis. These results uncover the causal role of infection in pB-ALL development.SIGNIFICANCE: These results demonstrate that delayed infection exposure is a causal factor in pB-ALL. Therefore, these fi ndings have critical implications for the understanding of the pathogenesis of leukemia and for the development of novel therapies for this disease. Cancer Discov; 5(12); 1328-43.
ETV6-RUNX1 is associated with the most common subtype of childhood leukemia. As few ETV6-RUNX1 carriers develop precursor B-cell acute lymphocytic leukemia (pB-ALL), the underlying genetic basis for development of full-blown leukemia remains to be identified, but the appearance of leukemia cases in timespace clusters keeps infection as a potential causal factor. Here, we present in vivo genetic evidence mechanistically connecting preleukemic ETV6-RUNX1 expression in hematopoetic stem cells/precursor cells (HSC/PC) and postnatal infections for human-like pB-ALL. In our model, ETV6-RUNX1 conferred a low risk of developing pB-ALL after exposure to common pathogens, corroborating the low incidence observed in humans. Murine preleukemic ETV6-RUNX1 pro/preB cells showed high Rag1/2 expression, known for human ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL. Murine and human ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL revealed recurrent genomic alterations, with a relevant proportion affecting genes of the lysine demethylase (KDM) family. KDM5C loss of function resulted in increased levels of H3K4me3, which coprecipitated with RAG2 in a human cell line model, laying the molecular basis for recombination activity. We conclude that alterations of KDM family members represent a disease-driving mechanism and an explanation for RAG off-target cleavage observed in humans. Our results explain the genetic basis for clonal evolution of an ETV6-RUNX1 preleukemic clone to pB-ALL after infection exposure and offer the possibility of novel therapeutic approaches.
The majority of childhood leukemias are precursor B cell-acute lymphoblastic leukemias (pB-ALL) caused by a combination of prenatal genetic predispositions and oncogenic events occurring after birth. Although genetic predispositions are frequent in children (>1-5%), fewer than 1% of genetically predisposed carriers will develop pB-ALL. While infectious stimuli are believed to play a major role in leukemogenesis, the critical determinants are not well defined. Here, employing murine models of pB-ALL, we show that microbiome disturbances incurred by antibiotic treatment early in life were sufficient to induce leukemia in genetically predisposed mice even in the absence of infectious stimuli and independent of T-cells. Using V4 and full-length 16S rRNA sequencing of a series of fecal samples, we found that genetic predisposition to pB-ALL (Pax5 heterozygosity or ETV6-RUNX1 fusion) shaped a distinct gut microbiome. Machine learning accurately (96.8%) predicted genetic predisposition using 40 of 3,983 amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) as proxies for bacterial species. Transplantation of either wild type (WT) or Pax5+/- hematopoietic bone marrow cells into WT recipient mice revealed that the microbiome is shaped and determined in a donor-genotype-specific manner. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometric (GC-MS) analyses of sera from WT and Pax5+/- mice demonstrated the presence of a genotype-specific distinct metabolomic profile. Taken together, our data indicate that it is a lack of commensal microbiota rather than the presence of specific bacteria that promotes leukemia in genetically predisposed mice. Future large-scale longitudinal studies are required to determine whether targeted microbiome modification in children predisposed to pB-ALL could become a successful prevention strategy.
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