4.8 Article

KDM4A Lysine Demethylase Induces Site-Specific Copy Gain and Rereplication of Regions Amplified in Tumors

Journal

CELL
Volume 154, Issue 3, Pages 541-555

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2013.06.051

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ellison Medical Foundation [CA059267, R01GM097360]
  2. NIH [U24CA143845]
  3. Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research
  4. MGH ECOR Tosteson Postdoctoral Fellowship
  5. CCSG [P30CA013330]
  6. [R01CA155202]

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Acquired chromosomal instability and copy number alterations are hallmarks of cancer. Enzymes capable of promoting site-specific copy number changes have yet to be identified. Here, we demonstrate that H3K9/36me3 lysine demethylase KDM4A/JMJD2A overexpression leads to localized copy gain of 1q12, 1q21, and Xq13.1 without global chromosome instability. KDM4A-amplified tumors have increased copy gains for these same regions. 1q12h copy gain occurs within a single cell cycle, requires S phase, and is not stable but is regenerated each cell division. Sites with increased copy number are rereplicated and have increased KDM4A, MCM, and DNA polymerase occupancy. Suv39h1/KMT1A or HP1 gamma overexpression suppresses the copy gain, whereas H3K9/K36 methylation interference promotes gain. Our results demonstrate that overexpression of a chromatin modifier results in site-specific copy gains. This begins to establish how copy number changes could originate during tumorigenesis and demonstrates that transient overexpression of specific chromatin modulators could promote these events.

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