4.3 Article

Epigenetic regulations in the IFNγ signalling pathway: IFNγ-mediated MHC class I upregulation on tumour cells is associated with DNA demethylation of antigen-presenting machinery genes

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 5, Issue 16, Pages 6923-6935

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.2222

Keywords

IFN gamma signalling; DNA demethylation; 5-azacytidine; MHC class I downregulation; tumour immunology

Funding

  1. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [301/10/2174]
  2. Clinigene Network of Excellence for the Advancement of Gene Transfer and Therapy [RVO 68378050]
  3. EU-FP6 Project [018933]
  4. European Union FP6 project CompuVac [LSHB-CT-04-005246]
  5. French state funds within the Investissements d'Avenir program (LabEx Transimmunom) [ANR-11-IDEX-0004-02]
  6. Grant Agency of the Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic [IGA NT14461]
  7. Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague

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Downregulation of MHC class I expression on tumour cells, a common mechanism by which tumour cells can escape from specific immune responses, can be associated with coordinated silencing of antigen-presenting machinery genes. The expression of these genes can be restored by IFN gamma. In this study we documented association of DNA demethylation of selected antigen-presenting machinery genes located in the MHC genomic locus (TAP-1, TAP-2, LMP-2, LMP-7) upon IFN gamma treatment with MHC class I upregulation on tumour cells in several MHC class I-deficient murine tumour cell lines (TC-1/A9, TRAMP-C2, MK16 and MC15). Our data also documented higher methylation levels in these genes in TC-1/A9 cells, as compared to their parental MHC class I-positive TC-1 cells. IFN gamma-mediated DNA demethylation was relatively fast in comparison with demethylation induced by DNA methyltransferase inhibitor 5-azacytidine, and associated with increased histone H3 acetylation in the promoter regions of APM genes. Comparative transcriptome analysis in distinct MHC class I-deficient cell lines upon their treatment with either IFN gamma or epigenetic agents revealed that a set of genes, significantly enriched for the antigen presentation pathway, was regulated in the same manner. Our data demonstrate that IFN gamma acts as an epigenetic modifier when upregulating the expression of antigen-presenting machinery genes.

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