Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Super-enhancer associated core regulatory circuits mediate susceptibility to retinoic acid in neuroblastoma cells.


ABSTRACT: Neuroblastoma is a pediatric tumour that accounts for more than 15% of cancer-related deaths in children. High-risk tumours are often difficult to treat, and patients' survival chances are less than 50%. Retinoic acid treatment is part of the maintenance therapy given to neuroblastoma patients; however, not all tumours differentiate in response to retinoic acid. Within neuroblastoma tumors, two phenotypically distinct cell types have been identified based on their super-enhancer landscape and transcriptional core regulatory circuitries: adrenergic (ADRN) and mesenchymal (MES). We hypothesized that the distinct super-enhancers in these different tumour cells mediate differential response to retinoic acid. To this end, three different neuroblastoma cell lines, ADRN (MYCN amplified and non-amplified) and MES cells, were treated with retinoic acid, and changes in the super-enhancer landscape upon treatment and after subsequent removal of retinoic acid was studied. Using ChIP-seq for the active histone mark H3K27ac, paired with RNA-seq, we compared the super-enhancer landscape in cells that undergo neuronal differentiation in response to retinoic acid versus those that fail to differentiate and identified unique super-enhancers associated with neuronal differentiation. Among the ADRN cells that respond to treatment, MYCN-amplified cells remain differentiated upon removal of retinoic acid, whereas MYCN non-amplified cells revert to an undifferentiated state, allowing for the identification of super-enhancers responsible for maintaining differentiation. This study identifies key super-enhancers that are crucial for retinoic acid-mediated differentiation.

SUBMITTER: Gomez RL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9485839 | biostudies-literature | 2022

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

altmetric image

Publications

Super-enhancer associated core regulatory circuits mediate susceptibility to retinoic acid in neuroblastoma cells.

Gomez Roshna Lawrence RL   Woods Laura M LM   Ramachandran Revathy R   Abou Tayoun Ahmad N AN   Philpott Anna A   Ali Fahad R FR  

Frontiers in cell and developmental biology 20220906


Neuroblastoma is a pediatric tumour that accounts for more than 15% of cancer-related deaths in children. High-risk tumours are often difficult to treat, and patients' survival chances are less than 50%. Retinoic acid treatment is part of the maintenance therapy given to neuroblastoma patients; however, not all tumours differentiate in response to retinoic acid. Within neuroblastoma tumors, two phenotypically distinct cell types have been identified based on their super-enhancer landscape and tr  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

2022-07-28 | GSE202241 | GEO
2022-07-28 | GSE201179 | GEO
2022-07-28 | GSE202239 | GEO
| PRJNA835104 | ENA
| PRJNA828609 | ENA
| PRJNA835108 | ENA
| S-EPMC8528416 | biostudies-literature
2018-05-22 | GSE94824 | GEO
2018-05-22 | GSE108914 | GEO
2018-05-22 | GSE94823 | GEO