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3637 NOTCH1 Induces Differential Epigenomic Patterning and Genomic Organization in Fetal Liver- and Adult Bone Marrow-Derived Hematopoietic Progentiors

Disordered Gene Expression in Hematologic Malignancy, including Disordered Epigenetic Regulation
Program: Oral and Poster Abstracts
Session: 602. Disordered Gene Expression in Hematologic Malignancy, including Disordered Epigenetic Regulation: Poster III
Monday, December 7, 2015, 6:00 PM-8:00 PM
Hall A, Level 2 (Orange County Convention Center)

Vincenzo Giambra, PhD1*, Sonya H Lam2*, Miriam Belmonte2*, Sam Gusscott3*, Sohrab Salehi2*, Fong Chun Chan4*, Robert Kridel, MD, MPH5, Alireza Lorzadeh6*, Catherine Hoofd, PhD2*, Christian Steidl, MD5, Connie J. Eaves, PhD1, Martin Hirst, PhD6* and Andrew P. Weng, MD, PhD7

1Terry Fox Laboratory, British Columbia Cancer Agency, Vancouver, BC, Canada
2Terry Fox Laboratory, BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver, Canada
3Terry Fox Laboratory, BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver, BC, Canada
4Centre for Lymphoid Cancer, BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver, Canada
5Centre for Lymphoid Cancer, British Columbia Cancer Agency, Vancouver, BC, Canada
6Dept of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
7Terry Fox Laboratory/Dept of Pathology, BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver, BC, Canada

T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is a malignancy of immature T-cell progenitors, characterized by activating NOTCH1 mutations in over 50% of children and adult cases. Although intensive multiagent chemotherapy achieves cure in most pediatric patients, the majority of adults succumb quickly to their disease. The basis for this divergence is likely multifactorial, but we sought in this study to investigate whether cell intrinsic features might contribute to the disparate biologies in pediatric and adult patients.

In our prior abstract, we modeled pediatric and adult leukemias by transduction of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) derived from mouse fetal liver (FL) and adult bone marrow (ABM) with activated NOTCH1 virus followed by transplantation into histocompatible recipient animals. We observed that whereas FL- and ABM-derived HSPC generate similar primary acute T-cell leukemias in terms of penetrance, latency, disease burden/distribution, and immunophenotype, FL leukemias exhibit much greater cycling activity than ABM leukemias, yet are dramatically impaired in their ability to propagate disease in secondary and tertiary recipients compared to ABM leukemias. Using a combination of gene expression profiling and in vitro culture assays, we attributed this differential behavior to NOTCH1-induced autocrine IGF signaling that is operative in FL, but not ABM-derived HSPC.

Here we report that NOTCH1 mediates its effects on IGF1 in FL-derived HSPC directly by physical occupancy over the IGF1 promoter in a dimerization-dependent fashion. As well, increased NOTCH1 occupancy at the IGF1 promoter region in FL tissues is associated with reduced histone H3K27 trimethylation (a mark of transcriptionally silent chromatin), yet there is equivalent histone H3K4 trimethylation (a mark identifying transcriptionally active promoters) in both FL and ABM tissues, suggesting that NOTCH1 may be responsible for interconverting the IGF1 locus between active and inactive, but poised chromatin states. NOTCH1 occupancy is also associated with enhanced physical interactions between the IGF1 promoter region and distant genomic loci as revealed by circularized chromosome conformation capture (4C) assay and confirmed by chromosome conformation capture (3C) assay, including sites with H3K4 monomethylation (a mark of transcriptional enhancers) suggesting that NOTCH1 promotes “looping in” of distant enhancer elements that drive IGF1 expression in FL tissues. We conclude from these studies that NOTCH1 enacts differential, developmental stage-specific transcriptional programs by a combination of local epigenetic patterning and long-range genomic interactions. These findings support the notion that pediatric and adult T-ALL may potentially be regarded as related, but biologically distinct diseases, and that novel, age-specific therapies that exploit these differences may improve clinical outcomes.

Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

*signifies non-member of ASH