학술논문

An Epigenomic fingerprint of human cancers by landscape interrogation of super enhancers at the constituent level.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS Computational Biology. 2/9/2024, Vol. 20 Issue 2, p1-18. 18p.
Subject
*SUPER enhancers
*HUMAN fingerprints
*GENETIC transcription regulation
*GENE expression
*GENETIC regulation
Language
ISSN
1553-734X
Abstract
Super enhancers (SE), large genomic elements that activate transcription and drive cell identity, have been found with cancer-specific gene regulation in human cancers. Recent studies reported the importance of understanding the cooperation and function of SE internal components, i.e., the constituent enhancers (CE). However, there are no pan-cancer studies to identify cancer-specific SE signatures at the constituent level. Here, by revisiting pan-cancer SE activities with H3K27Ac ChIP-seq datasets, we report fingerprint SE signatures for 28 cancer types in the NCI-60 cell panel. We implement a mixture model to discriminate active CEs from inactive CEs by taking into consideration ChIP-seq variabilities between cancer samples and across CEs. We demonstrate that the model-based estimation of CE states provides improved functional interpretation of SE-associated regulation. We identify cancer-specific CEs by balancing their active prevalence with their capability of encoding cancer type identities. We further demonstrate that cancer-specific CEs have the strongest per-base enhancer activities in independent enhancer sequencing assays, suggesting their importance in understanding critical SE signatures. We summarize fingerprint SEs based on the cancer-specific statuses of their component CEs and build an easy-to-use R package to facilitate the query, exploration, and visualization of fingerprint SEs across cancers. Author summary: Super enhancers are large genomic elements comprised of multiple enhancers working together to drive gene transcription. They play a crucial role in defining cell identity and act as drivers of oncogenic gene expression in cancer cells. Characterizing cancer-specific super enhancer signatures can reveal transcriptional deregulation associated with cell origin and malignant transformation. Here, we generated a high-resolution fingerprint of super enhancers across 60 cancer cell lines through statistical modeling of both active and inactive components inside super enhancers. Our study revealed that cancer-specific super enhancer components are highly informative in delineating the identity of cancer cells. Our findings further revealed that cancer-specific active components exhibit stronger enhancer activities compared to non-cancer-specific components, suggesting the importance of studying the functional divergence inside super enhancers across different cancer types. Finally, we generated a database of cancer-specific super enhancer signatures for 28 cancer types with a companion computational tool to facilitate the query, exploration, and visualization of these signatures across cancers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]