Hotspots of aberrant enhancer activity punctuate the colorectal cancer epigenome

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Abstract

In addition to mutations in genes, aberrant enhancer element activity at non-coding regions of the genome is a key driver of tumorigenesis. Here, we perform epigenomic enhancer profiling of a cohort of more than forty genetically diverse human colorectal cancer (CRC) specimens. Using normal colonic crypt epithelium as a comparator, we identify enhancers with recurrently gained or lost activity across CRC specimens. Of the enhancers highly recurrently activated in CRC, most are constituents of super enhancers, are occupied by AP-1 and cohesin complex members, and originate from primed chromatin. Many activate known oncogenes, and CRC growth can be mitigated through pharmacologic inhibition or genome editing of these loci. Nearly half of all GWAS CRC risk loci co-localize to recurrently activated enhancers. These findings indicate that the CRC epigenome is defined by highly recurrent epigenetic alterations at enhancers which activate a common, aberrant transcriptional programme critical for CRC growth and survival.

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Cohen, A. J., Saiakhova, A., Corradin, O., Luppino, J. M., Lovrenert, K., Bartels, C. F., … Scacheri, P. C. (2017). Hotspots of aberrant enhancer activity punctuate the colorectal cancer epigenome. Nature Communications, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14400

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