DNA hypomethylation silences anti-tumor immune genes in early prostate cancer and CTCs
Menée à l'aide de lignées cellulaires et de modèles murins ainsi que d'échantillons sanguins et d'échantillons tumoraux issus de patients atteints d'un cancer métastatique de la prostate, cette étude identifie des domaines hypométhylés détectables dans les cellules tumorales circulantes et associés à la répression de gènes impliqués dans l'immunité antitumorale
Résumé en anglais
Cancer is characterized by hypomethylation-associated silencing of large chromatin domains, whose contribution to tumorigenesis is uncertain. Through high-resolution genome-wide single-cell DNA methylation sequencing, we identify 40 core domains that are uniformly hypomethylated from the earliest detectable stages of prostate malignancy through metastatic circulating tumor cells (CTCs). Nested among these repressive domains are smaller loci with preserved methylation that escape silencing and are enriched for cell proliferation genes. Transcriptionally silenced genes within the core hypomethylated domains are enriched for immune-related genes; prominent among these is a single gene cluster harboring all five CD1 genes that present lipid antigens to NKT cells and four IFI16-related interferon-inducible genes implicated in innate immunity. The re-expression of CD1 or IFI16 murine orthologs in immuno-competent mice abrogates tumorigenesis, accompanied by the activation of anti-tumor immunity. Thus, early epigenetic changes may shape tumorigenesis, targeting co-located genes within defined chromosomal loci. Hypomethylation domains are detectable in blood specimens enriched for CTCs.