4.8 Article

Phase separation drives aberrant chromatin looping and cancer development

Journal

NATURE
Volume 595, Issue 7868, Pages 591-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03662-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. North Carolina Biotechnology Center Institute Development Program grant [2017-IDG-1005]
  2. UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center Core Support Grant [P30-CA016086]
  3. NIH-NINDS Neuroscience Center Support Grant [P30 NS045892]
  4. NIH-NICHD Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center Support Grant [U54 HD079124]
  5. NIH [R01-CA215284, R01-CA218600, R35-GM128645, DP2GM136653, P20GM121293, R24GM137786, R01CA236209, S10OD018445, TL1TR003109, R01HL148128, R01HL153920]
  6. Kimmel Scholar Award
  7. Gabrielle's Angel Foundation for Cancer Research
  8. Gilead Sciences Research Scholars Program in haematology/oncology
  9. When Everyone Survives (WES) Leukemia Research Foundation
  10. UNC Lineberger Stimulus Awards
  11. NIH-NIGMS [T32-GM067553]

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The development of cancer is closely associated with genetic abnormalities targeting proteins with intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs), which play a crucial role in leukaemic transformation. The presence of IDRs within chimera transcription factors promotes liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS), enhancing their genomic targeting and inducing aberrant three-dimensional chromatin structure during tumourous transformation.
The development of cancer is intimately associated with genetic abnormalities that target proteins with intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs). In human haematological malignancies, recurrent chromosomal translocation of nucleoporin (NUP98 or NUP214) generates an aberrant chimera that invariably retains the nucleoporin IDR-tandemly dispersed repeats of phenylalanine and glycine residues(1,2). However, how unstructured IDRs contribute to oncogenesis remains unclear. Here we show that IDRs contained within NUP98-HOXA9, a homeodomain-containing transcription factor chimera recurrently detected in leukaemias(1,2), are essential for establishing liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) puncta of chimera and for inducing leukaemic transformation. Notably, LLPS of NUP98-HOXA9 not only promotes chromatin occupancy of chimera transcription factors, but also is required for the formation of a broad `super-enhancer'-like binding pattern typically seen at leukaemogenic genes, which potentiates transcriptional activation. An artificial HOX chimera, created by replacing the phenylalanine and glycine repeats of NUP98 with an unrelated LLPS-forming IDR of the FUS protein(3,4), had similar enhancing effects on the genome-wide binding and target gene activation of the chimera. Deeply sequenced Hi-C revealed that phase-separated NUP98-HOXA9 induces CTCF-independent chromatin loops that are enriched at proto-oncogenes. Together, this report describes a proof-of-principle example in which cancer acquires mutation to establish oncogenic transcription factor condensates via phase separation, which simultaneously enhances their genomic targeting and induces organization of aberrant three-dimensional chromatin structure during tumourous transformation. As LLPS-competent molecules are frequently implicated in diseases(1,2,4-7), this mechanism can potentially be generalized to many malignant and pathological settings.

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