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Histone methylation antagonism drives tumor immune evasion in squamous cell carcinomas.

Molecular cell (2022-10-08)
Yinglu Li, Elizabeth M Goldberg, Xiao Chen, Xinjing Xu, John T McGuire, Giuseppe Leuzzi, Dimitris Karagiannis, Tiffany Tate, Nargess Farhangdoost, Cynthia Horth, Esther Dai, Zhiming Li, Zhiguo Zhang, Benjamin Izar, Jianwen Que, Alberto Ciccia, Jacek Majewski, Angela J Yoon, Laurie Ailles, Cathy Lee Mendelsohn, Chao Lu
RESUMEN

How cancer-associated chromatin abnormalities shape tumor-immune interaction remains incompletely understood. Recent studies have linked DNA hypomethylation and de-repression of retrotransposons to anti-tumor immunity through the induction of interferon response. Here, we report that inactivation of the histone H3K36 methyltransferase NSD1, which is frequently found in squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) and induces DNA hypomethylation, unexpectedly results in diminished tumor immune infiltration. In syngeneic and genetically engineered mouse models of head and neck SCCs, NSD1-deficient tumors exhibit immune exclusion and reduced interferon response despite high retrotransposon expression. Mechanistically, NSD1 loss results in silencing of innate immunity genes, including the type III interferon receptor IFNLR1, through depletion of H3K36 di-methylation (H3K36me2) and gain of H3K27 tri-methylation (H3K27me3). Inhibition of EZH2 restores immune infiltration and impairs the growth of Nsd1-mutant tumors. Thus, our work uncovers a druggable chromatin cross talk that regulates the viral mimicry response and enables immune evasion of DNA hypomethylated tumors.

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Tamoxifeno, ≥99%
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Hydrocortisone, γ-irradiated, powder, BioXtra, suitable for cell culture
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Spermidine, ≥99% (GC)
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Anti-Mouse IgG (H+L) antibody produced in donkey, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous solution