EZH2 or HDAC1 Inhibition Reverses Multiple Myeloma-Induced Epigenetic Suppression of Osteoblast Differentiation

In multiple myeloma, osteolytic lesions rarely heal because of persistent suppressed osteoblast differentiation resulting in a high fracture risk. Herein, chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses reveal that multiple myeloma cells induce repressive epigenetic histone changes at the locus that prevent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular cancer research 2017-04, Vol.15 (4), p.405-417
Hauptverfasser: Adamik, Juraj, Jin, Shunqian, Sun, Quanhong, Zhang, Peng, Weiss, Kurt R, Anderson, Judith L, Silbermann, Rebecca, Roodman, G David, Galson, Deborah L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In multiple myeloma, osteolytic lesions rarely heal because of persistent suppressed osteoblast differentiation resulting in a high fracture risk. Herein, chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses reveal that multiple myeloma cells induce repressive epigenetic histone changes at the locus that prevent osteoblast differentiation. The most pronounced multiple myeloma-induced changes were at the promoter, converting it from a poised bivalent state to a repressed state. Previously, it was observed that multiple myeloma induces the transcription repressor GFI1 in osteoblast precursors, which correlates with decreased expression, thus prompting detailed characterization of the multiple myeloma and TNFα-dependent GFI1 response element within the promoter. Further analyses reveal that multiple myeloma-induced GFI1 binding to in osteoblast precursors and recruitment of the histone modifiers HDAC1, LSD1, and EZH2 is required to establish and maintain repression in osteogenic conditions. These GFI1-mediated repressive chromatin changes persist even after removal of multiple myeloma. Ectopic GFI1 is sufficient to bind to , recruit HDAC1 and EZH2, increase H3K27me3 on the gene, and prevent osteogenic induction of endogenous expression. knockdown in MC4 cells blocked multiple myeloma-induced recruitment of HDAC1 and EZH2 to , acquisition of repressive chromatin architecture, and suppression of osteoblast differentiation. Importantly, inhibition of EZH2 or HDAC1 activity in pre-osteoblasts after multiple myeloma exposure or in osteoblast precursors from patients with multiple myeloma reversed the repressive chromatin architecture at and rescued osteoblast differentiation. This study suggests that therapeutically targeting EZH2 or HDAC1 activity may reverse the profound multiple myeloma-induced osteoblast suppression and allow repair of the lytic lesions. .
ISSN:1541-7786
1557-3125
DOI:10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-16-0242-T