4.7 Article

H3K4me3 remodeling induced acquired resistance through O-GlcNAc transferase

Journal

DRUG RESISTANCE UPDATES
Volume 71, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.drup.2023.100993

Keywords

Cellular reprogramming; Epigenetics; Metabolism; OGT; TET1; Cancer persisters; Adaptive cancer drug resistance; Acquired drug resistance

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This study explores the mechanism of adaptive drug resistance and identifies OGT as a key regulator of DTPPs. The findings suggest that OGT plays a role in cancer cell reprogramming towards acquired drug resistance. Understanding this mechanism may help improve response duration and patient outcomes.
Aims: Drivers of the drug tolerant proliferative persister (DTPP) state have not been well investigated. Histone H3 lysine-4 trimethylation (H3K4me3), an active histone mark, might enable slow cycling drug tolerant persisters (DTP) to regain proliferative capacity. This study aimed to determine H3K4me3 transcriptionally active sites identifying a key regulator of DTPPs.Methods: Deploying a model of adaptive cancer drug tolerance, H3K4me3 ChIP-Seq data of DTPPs guided identification of top transcription factor binding motifs. These suggested involvement of O-linked N-acetylglucosamine transferase (OGT), which was confirmed by metabolomics analysis and biochemical assays. OGT impact on DTPPs and adaptive resistance was explored in vitro and in vivo.Results: H3K4me3 remodeling was widespread in CPG island regions and DNA binding motifs associated with OGlcNAc marked chromatin. Accordingly, we observed an upregulation of OGT, O-GlcNAc and its binding partner TET1 in chronically treated cancer cells. Inhibition of OGT led to loss of H3K4me3 and downregulation of genes contributing to drug resistance. Genetic ablation of OGT prevented acquired drug resistance in in vivo models. Upstream of OGT, we identified AMPK as an actionable target. AMPK activation by acetyl salicylic acid down regulated OGT with similar effects on delaying acquired resistance.Conclusion: Our findings uncover a fundamental mechanism of adaptive drug resistance that governs cancer cell reprogramming towards acquired drug resistance, a process that can be exploited to improve response duration and patient outcomes.

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