Abstract

BackgroundThe epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a de-differentiation process required for wound healing and development. In tumors of epithelial origin aberrant induction of EMT contributes to cancer progression and metastasis. Studies have begun to implicate epigenetic reprogramming in EMT; however, the relationship between reprogramming and the coordination of cellular processes is largely unexplored. We have previously developed a system to study EMT in a canonical non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) model. In this system we have shown that the induction of EMT results in constitutive NF-κB activity. We hypothesized a role for chromatin remodeling in the sustained deregulation of cellular signaling pathways.ResultsWe mapped sixteen histone modifications and two variants for epithelial and mesenchymal states. Combinatorial patterns of epigenetic changes were quantified at gene and enhancer loci. We found a distinct chromatin signature among genes in well-established EMT pathways. Strikingly, these genes are only a small minority of those that are differentially expressed. At putative enhancers of genes with the ‘EMT-signature’ we observed highly coordinated epigenetic activation or repression. Furthermore, enhancers that are activated are bound by a set of transcription factors that is distinct from those that bind repressed enhancers. Upregulated genes with the ‘EMT-signature’ are upstream regulators of NF-κB, but are also bound by NF-κB at their promoters and enhancers. These results suggest a chromatin-mediated positive feedback as a likely mechanism for sustained NF-κB activation.ConclusionsThere is highly specific epigenetic regulation at genes and enhancers across several pathways critical to EMT. The sites of these changes in chromatin state implicate several inducible transcription factors with critical roles in EMT (NF-κB, AP-1 and MYC) as targets of this reprogramming. Furthermore, we find evidence that suggests that these transcription factors are in chromatin-mediated transcriptional feedback loops that regulate critical EMT genes. In sum, we establish an important link between chromatin remodeling and shifts in cellular reprogramming.

Highlights

  • The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a de-differentiation process required for wound healing and development

  • A rapidly growing body of research demonstrates that EMT is an epigenetically regulated process

  • EMT in nontransformed cells has been likewise linked to remodeling of specific chromatin domains [9]

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Summary

Introduction

The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a de-differentiation process required for wound healing and development. We have previously developed a system to study EMT in a canonical non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) model. In this system we have shown that the induction of EMT results in constitutive NF-κB activity. An increasing body of evidence indicates that the mesenchymal phenotype is established through genome-wide and locus-specific epigenetic reprogramming [9,10,11]. This suggests that epithelial and mesenchymal phenotypes are coordinated through changes to chromatin states, and a possible role for the so-called ‘histone code’ in EMT [12,13]. Studies have begun to discover mechanistic roles for changes in specific histone modifications during EMT, the combinatorial nature of the reprogramming remains unclear [9]

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