Noncoding mutations cause super-enhancer retargeting resulting in protein synthesis dysregulation during B cell lymphoma progression. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Whole-genome sequencing of longitudinal tumor pairs representing transformation of follicular lymphoma to high-grade B cell lymphoma with MYC and BCL2 rearrangements (double-hit lymphoma) identified coding and noncoding genomic alterations acquired during lymphoma progression. Many of these transformation-associated alterations recurrently and focally occur at topologically associating domain resident regulatory DNA elements, including H3K4me3 promoter marks located within H3K27ac super-enhancer clusters in B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. One region found to undergo recurrent alteration upon transformation overlaps a super-enhancer affecting the expression of the PAX5/ZCCHC7 gene pair. ZCCHC7 encodes a subunit of the Trf4/5-Air1/2-Mtr4 polyadenylation-like complex and demonstrated copy number gain, chromosomal translocation and enhancer retargeting-mediated transcriptional upregulation upon lymphoma transformation. Consequently, lymphoma cells demonstrate nucleolar dysregulation via altered noncoding 5.8S ribosomal RNA processing. We find that a noncoding mutation acquired during lymphoma progression affects noncoding rRNA processing, thereby rewiring protein synthesis leading to oncogenic changes in the lymphoma proteome.

authors

  • Leeman-Neill, Rebecca
  • Song, Dong
  • Bizarro, Jonathan
  • Wacheul, Ludivine
  • Rothschild, Gerson
  • Singh, Sameer
  • Yang, Yang
  • Sarode, Aditya Y
  • Gollapalli, Kishore
  • Wu, Lijing
  • Zhang, Wanwei
  • Chen, Yiyun
  • Lauring, Max C
  • Whisenant, D Eric
  • Bhavsar, Shweta
  • Lim, Junghyun
  • Swerdlow, Steven H
  • Bhagat, Govind
  • Zhao, Qian
  • Berchowitz, Luke E
  • Lafontaine, Denis L J
  • Wang, Jiguang
  • Basu, Uttiya

publication date

  • December 4, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Lymphoma
  • Lymphoma, B-Cell

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC10703697

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85178490498

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/s41588-023-01561-1

PubMed ID

  • 38049665

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 55

issue

  • 12