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Series GSE143293 Query DataSets for GSE143293
Status Public on Sep 02, 2020
Title Histone 1 deficiency drives lymphomagenesis through disruption of 3D chromatin architecture
Organism Mus musculus
Experiment type Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Genome binding/occupancy profiling by high throughput sequencing
Other
Summary Linker histone H1 proteins bind to nucleosomes and cause chromatin compaction, although little is known about their biological functions. Histone H1 (HIST1H1B-E) mutations are highly recurrent in B-cell lymphomas and are present in solid tumors, but their cancer relevance and mechanism are unknown. Here we report that lymphoma-associated H1 alleles are genetic driver mutations in lymphomas. H1 mutations disrupt their ability to bind or compact chromatin. This causes profound architectural remodeling of the genome characterized by large-scale, yet focal shifts of chromatin from a compacted, to a relaxed state. The degree of decompaction results in distinct epigenetic states, primarily due to gain of histone H3 lysine 36 dimethylation, and/or loss of repressive H3K27 methylation. These changes unlock expression of stem cell genes that are normally silenced during early development. Loss of H1c and H1e alleles in mice conferred enhanced fitness and self renewal properties to germinal center B-cells, ultimately leading to aggressive lymphoma with enhanced repopulating potential. Collectively, our data indicate that H1 proteins are normally required to sequester early developmental genes into architecturally inaccessible genomic compartments. We furthermore establish H1 as a bona fide tumor suppressor, whose mutation drives malignant transformation primarily through three-dimensional genome reorganization, epigenetic reprogramming and aberrant de-repression of developmentally silenced genes.
 
Overall design RNA-seq, ChIP-seq, Cut&Run, ATAC-seq, and HiC sequencing data in HIST1H1C- and HIST1H1E-deficient germinal center B cells
 
Contributor(s) Yusufova N, Teater M, Cesarman E, Melnick AM, Doane AS
Citation(s) 33299181
Submission date Jan 08, 2020
Last update date Dec 01, 2023
Contact name Matt Teater
E-mail(s) mrt2001@med.cornell.edu
Organization name Weill Cornell Medical College
Street address 445 E 69th St
City New York
State/province NY
ZIP/Postal code 10021
Country USA
 
Platforms (4)
GPL17021 Illumina HiSeq 2500 (Mus musculus)
GPL21103 Illumina HiSeq 4000 (Mus musculus)
GPL21626 NextSeq 550 (Mus musculus)
Samples (53)
GSM4256478 Sample_1_GCB_WT_repl1_RNAseq
GSM4256479 Sample_2_GCB_WT_repl2_RNAseq
GSM4256480 Sample_3_GCB_WT_repl3_RNAseq
Relations
BioProject PRJNA599930
SRA SRP240350

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE143293_RAW.tar 4.3 Gb (http)(custom) TAR (of HIC, MTX, TSV, TXT)
SRA Run SelectorHelp
Raw data are available in SRA
Processed data provided as supplementary file

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