Abstract

Abstract Low oxygen availability (hypoxia) is a common feature of many solid tumors and is associated with poor prognosis and resistance to therapy. The main regulator of cellular responses to hypoxia is the transcription factor HIF (hypoxia-inducible factor). In addition, several histone lysine demethylases (KDMs) are 2-OG dependent dioxygenases and require oxygen for their activity. When oxygen availability is limited, the activity of these KDMs is inhibited leading to global histone hypermethylation, potentially altering gene expression. However, some KDMs are also known to be direct transcriptional targets of HIF, increasing their expression in hypoxia and counteracting this histone hypermethylation. Furthermore, HIF can facilitate recruitment of histone methyltransferase activity to chromatin in cis, leading to local increases in methylation status. Histone methylation can be associated with both gene activation and gene repression, and it remains unclear how the balance of these widespread changes relates to locus-specific regulation of gene expression. Furthermore, previous attempts to analyze regulation of histone methylation by ChIP-seq in hypoxia have not employed normalization methods that take into account global changes in histone modification. We have performed ChIP-seq analysis of histone trimethylation (H3K4me3, H3K9me3, H3K27me3 and H3K36me3) in PC3 prostate cancer cells incubated in normoxia or (16hrs, 1%) hypoxia. We have then examined the effects of the HIF-transcriptional pathway on these marks using the same cell line following deletion of HIF-1b to block the HIF response. We employ an integrated spike-in with drosophila chromatin to provide a normalization control. We then relate our findings to changes in gene expression using RNA-seq analysis, again normalized to a spike-in control. We observe global increases in all 4 histone trimethylations across the genome in hypoxia. In particular, we observe hypoxic increases in histone trimethylation at all gene loci. However, while basal levels of histone trimethylation correlated with basal transcript levels as previously reported, hypoxic increases in promoter-associated histone H3K4me3 trimethylation bore no relation to either the direction or magnitude of gene regulation in hypoxia. Although, more subtle increases were observed across the gene body at gene loci induced by hypoxia. These findings question the currently accepted model that changes in H3K4me3 instruct changes in transcription in hypoxia and suggest that the overall effect of histone trimethylation is a more subtle balance of competing effects. Citation Format: Jessica D. Kindrick, Peter J. Ratcliffe, WIlliam Doug Figg, David R. Mole. Correlating locus-specific changes in histone trimethylation and gene expression in hypoxia [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 3766.

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