Endometrial tumorigenesis involves epigenetic plasticity demarcating non-coding somatic mutations and 3D-genome alterations.

Abstract

CONCLUSIONS

In summary, we identify a complex genomic-epigenomic interplay in EC development and progression, altering 3D genome organization to enhance expression of the critical driver ERα.

BACKGROUND

The incidence and mortality of endometrial cancer (EC) is on the rise. Eighty-five percent of ECs depend on estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) for proliferation, but little is known about its transcriptional regulation in these tumors.

RESULTS

We generate epigenomics, transcriptomics, and Hi-C datastreams in healthy and tumor endometrial tissues, identifying robust ERα reprogramming and profound alterations in 3D genome organization that lead to a gain of tumor-specific enhancer activity during EC development. Integration with endometrial cancer risk single-nucleotide polymorphisms and whole-genome sequencing data from primary tumors and metastatic samples reveals a striking enrichment of risk variants and non-coding somatic mutations at tumor-enriched ERα sites. Through machine learning-based predictions and interaction proteomics analyses, we identify an enhancer mutation which alters 3D genome conformation, impairing recruitment of the transcriptional repressor EHMT2/G9a/KMT1C, thereby alleviating transcriptional repression of ESR1 in EC.

More about this publication

Genome biology
  • Volume 26
  • Issue nr. 1
  • Pages 124
  • Publication date 09-05-2025

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