Multi-faceted epigenetic dysregulation of gene expression promotes esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

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Abstract

Epigenetic landscapes can shape physiologic and disease phenotypes. We used integrative, high resolution multi-omics methods to delineate the methylome landscape and characterize the oncogenic drivers of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). We found 98% of CpGs are hypomethylated across the ESCC genome. Hypo-methylated regions are enriched in areas with heterochromatin binding markers (H3K9me3, H3K27me3), while hyper-methylated regions are enriched in polycomb repressive complex (EZH2/SUZ12) recognizing regions. Altered methylation in promoters, enhancers, and gene bodies, as well as in polycomb repressive complex occupancy and CTCF binding sites are associated with cancer-specific gene dysregulation. Epigenetic-mediated activation of non-canonical WNT/β-catenin/MMP signaling and a YY1/lncRNA ESCCAL-1/ribosomal protein network are uncovered and validated as potential novel ESCC driver alterations. This study advances our understanding of how epigenetic landscapes shape cancer pathogenesis and provides a resource for biomarker and target discovery.

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Cao, W., Lee, H., Wu, W., Zaman, A., McCorkle, S., Yan, M., … Bivona, T. G. (2020). Multi-faceted epigenetic dysregulation of gene expression promotes esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17227-z

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