Pseudogene-mediated DNA demethylation leads to oncogene activation

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Abstract

Pseudogenes, noncoding homologs of protein-coding genes, once considered nonfunctional evolutionary relics, have recently been linked to patient prognoses and cancer subtypes. Despite this potential clinical importance, only a handful of >12,000 pseudogenes in humans have been characterized in cancers to date. Here, we describe a previously unrecognized role for pseudogenes as potent epigenetic regulators that can demethylate and activate oncogenes. We focused on SALL4, a known oncogene in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with eight pseudogenes. Using a locus-specific demethylating technology, we identified the critical CpG region for SALL4 expression. We demonstrated that SALL4 pseudogene 5 hypomethylates this region through interaction with DNMT1, resulting in SALL4 up-regulation. Intriguingly, pseudogene 5 is significantly up-regulated in a hepatitis B virus model before SALL4 induction, and both are increased in patients with HBV-HCC. Our results suggest that pseudogene-mediated demethylation represents a novel mechanism of oncogene activation in cancer.

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Kwon, J., Liu, Y. V., Gao, C., Bassal, M. A., Jones, A. I., Yang, J., … Tenen, D. G. (2021). Pseudogene-mediated DNA demethylation leads to oncogene activation. Science Advances, 7(40). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abg1695

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