Abstract
Abstract Mutational inactivation of the SWI/SNF chromatin regulator ATRX occurs frequently in diffuse gliomas. Whether and how ATRX deficiency promotes oncogenesis remains unclear, despite its implication across a broad array of physiological processes. We sought to delineate the molecular mechanisms by which global epigenomic dysfunction promotes oncogenic phenotypes in ATRX-deficient glioma models. Building on earlier work implicating chromatin accessibility and transcriptional shifts, we employed integrated epigenomic profiling in Atrx-intact and -deficient murine neuroepithelial progenitor cells (mNPCs), validating findings will functional approaches in human glioma stem cells (GSCs) of appropriate genotype. We found that ATRX deficiency dramatically impacted the integrity of large heterochromatin domains genome-wide, with tangible effects on underlying gene expression. This process fundamentally altered chromatin topology, as assessed by Hi-C analysis, and associated superenhancer landscapes, influencing key developmental gene sets like the HOXA cluster. Pharmacological inhibition of HOXA signaling in GSCs selectively reduced proliferation, increased apoptosis, and impaired in vivo growth in the ATRX-deficient context. Finally, our results pointed to derepression of LINE1 endogenous retroviral elements as key mediators of ATRX-deficient heterochromatin dysfunction. Our work implicates novel and targetable molecular mechanisms involving complex epigenomic rewiring and chromatin topology in ATRX-deficient oncogenesis. In doing so, we advance the understanding of a deadly brain tumor along with broader conceptions of epigenetic mechanisms as fundamental drivers in cancer.
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