4.7 Article

CBX2 shapes chromatin accessibility promoting AML via p38 MAPK signaling pathway

Journal

MOLECULAR CANCER
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12943-022-01603-y

Keywords

PcG; Leukemia; CBX2; Epigenetics; Chromatin readers; Cancer

Funding

  1. FP7-BLUEPRINT [282510]
  2. Campania Regional Government Lotta alle Patologie Oncologiche iCURE [CUP B21C17000030007]
  3. Campania Regional Government FASE 2: IDEAL [CUP B63D18000560007]
  4. MIUR [POC01_00043]
  5. MISE: Nabucco Project
  6. VALERE: Vanvitelli per la Ricerca Program: EPInhibitDRUGre [CUP B66J20000680005]
  7. PON Ricerca e Innovazione 2014-2020-Linea 1 [AIM -AIM1859703]

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CBX2 plays a crucial role in leukemia progression, and its silencing can inhibit cell proliferation and induce apoptosis, as well as alter cell transcriptional programs. CBX2 suppression also increases chromatin accessibility, alters gene expression, and results in enrichment of cell death pathways and downregulation of survival genes. CBX2 silencing also induces epigenetic reprogramming at p38 MAPK-associated regulatory sites, leading to dysregulation of gene expression.
Background The dynamic epigenome and proteins specialized in the interpretation of epigenetic marks critically contribute to leukemic pathogenesis but also offer alternative therapeutic avenues. Targeting newly discovered chromatin readers involved in leukemogenesis may thus provide new anticancer strategies. Accumulating evidence suggests that the PRC1 complex member CBX2 is overexpressed in solid tumors and promotes cancer cell survival. However, its role in leukemia is still unclear. Methods We exploited reverse genetic approaches to investigate the role of CBX2 in human leukemic cell lines and ex vivo samples. We also analyzed phenotypic effects following CBX2 silencing using cellular and molecular assays and related functional mechanisms by ATAC-seq and RNA-seq. We then performed bioinformatic analysis of ChIP-seq data to explore the influence of histone modifications in CBX2-mediated open chromatin sites. Lastly, we used molecular assays to determine the contribution of CBX2-regulated pathways to leukemic phenotype. Results We found CBX2 overexpressed in leukemia both in vitro and ex vivo samples compared to CD34(+) cells. Decreased CBX2 RNA levels prompted a robust reduction in cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis. Similarly, sensitivity to CBX2 silencing was observed in primary acute myeloid leukemia samples. CBX2 suppression increased genome-wide chromatin accessibility followed by alteration of leukemic cell transcriptional programs, resulting in enrichment of cell death pathways and downregulation of survival genes. Intriguingly, CBX2 silencing induced epigenetic reprogramming at p38 MAPK-associated regulatory sites with consequent deregulation of gene expression. Conclusions Our results identify CBX2 as a crucial player in leukemia progression and highlight a potential druggable CBX2-p38 MAPK network in AML.

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