DNA crosslinking and recombination-activating genes 1/2 (RAG1/2) are required for oncogenic splicing in acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Cancer Commun (Lond)

Shanghai Institute of Hematology, State Key Laboratory of Medical Genomics, National Research Center for Translational Medicine, Rui-Jin Hospital, School of Medicine and School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai JiaoTong University, Shanghai, 200025, P. R. China.

Published: November 2021

Background: Abnormal alternative splicing is frequently associated with carcinogenesis. In B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), double homeobox 4 fused with immunoglobulin heavy chain (DUX4/IGH) can lead to the aberrant production of E-26 transformation-specific family related gene abnormal transcript (ERG ) and other splicing variants. However, the molecular mechanism underpinning this process remains elusive. Here, we aimed to know how DUX4/IGH triggers abnormal splicing in leukemia.

Methods: The differential intron retention analysis was conducted to identify novel DUX4/IGH-driven splicing in B-ALL patients. X-ray crystallography, small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and analytical ultracentrifugation were used to investigate how DUX4/IGH recognize double DUX4 responsive element (DRE)-DRE sites. The ERG biogenesis and B-cell differentiation assays were performed to characterize the DUX4/IGH crosslinking activity. To check whether recombination-activating gene 1/2 (RAG1/2) was required for DUX4/IGH-driven splicing, the proximity ligation assay, co-immunoprecipitation, mammalian two hybrid characterizations, in vitro RAG1/2 cleavage, and shRNA knock-down assays were performed.

Results: We reported previously unrecognized intron retention events in C-type lectin domain family 12, member A abnormal transcript (CLEC12A ) and chromosome 6 open reading frame 89 abnormal transcript (C6orf89 ), where also harbored repetitive DRE-DRE sites. Supportively, X-ray crystallography and SAXS characterization revealed that DUX4 homeobox domain (HD)1-HD2 might dimerize into a dumbbell-shape trans configuration to crosslink two adjacent DRE sites. Impaired DUX4/IGH-mediated crosslinking abolishes ERG , CLEC12A , and C6orf89 biogenesis, resulting in marked alleviation of its inhibitory effect on B-cell differentiation. Furthermore, we also observed a rare RAG1/2-mediated recombination signal sequence-like DNA edition in DUX4/IGH target genes. Supportively, shRNA knock-down of RAG1/2 in leukemic Reh cells consistently impaired the biogenesis of ERG , CLEC12A , and C6orf89 .

Conclusions: All these results suggest that DUX4/IGH-driven DNA crosslinking is required for RAG1/2 recruitment onto the double tandem DRE-DRE sites, catalyzing V(D)J-like recombination and oncogenic splicing in acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8626599PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cac2.12234DOI Listing

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