Abstract

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGG) are among the most lethal of all human cancers. Histone H3.3 G34R/V mutations are an early event in these tumors and show reduced H3.3 K36 trimethylation; implicating epigenetic dysregulation in tumorigenesis. Here we present evidence that H3.3 G34R/V mutations promote tumor formation via the induction of chromosomal instability (CIN). Pericentromeric H3.3 is phosphorylated at S31 by Chk1 during mitosis. We observed that the H3.3 G34R mutation reduced Chk1 phosphorylation of H3.3 S31 by >90% in vitro. Furthermore, H3.3 G34 mutant cells have reduced pericentromeric H3.3 S31 phosphorylation in mitosis compared to WT H3.3 cell lines. H3.3 G34 mutant pHGG cells also have significantly elevated rates of CIN as compared to H3.3 WT cells. Overexpression of H3.3 G34R, G34V or non-phosphorylatable S31A in H3.3 WT, diploid cells caused a significant increase in CIN, but H3.3 K36M overexpression had no effect on chromosome segregation. These studies demonstrate that H3.3 G34R/V mutations are sufficient to induce CIN in normal, diploid cells. To determine if this process contributes to tumorigenesis, we used RCAS Nestin-TVA mice to overexpress H3.3 WT, G34R, or S31A – P2A-linked to PDGFB in glial precursor cells of newborn mice. Over 100 days, S31A and G34R mice had drastically reduced survival (averaging 77, 81, and 100 days for S31A, G34R, and WT). Furthermore, most G34R and S31A mice developed HGG, while H3.3 WT mice remained tumor-free. Our work implicates CIN as a driver of H3.3 G34 mutant pHGG formation.

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