SUMOylation inhibition potentiates the glucocorticoid receptor to program growth arrest of acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells
Valima, Emma; Varis, Vera; Bureiko, Kseniia; Lempiäinen, Joanna K.; Schroderus, Anna Mari; Oksa, Laura; Lohi, Olli; Kinnunen, Tuure; Varjosalo, Markku; Niskanen, Einari A.; Paakinaho, Ville; Palvimo, Jorma J. (2025)
Valima, Emma
Varis, Vera
Bureiko, Kseniia
Lempiäinen, Joanna K.
Schroderus, Anna Mari
Oksa, Laura
Lohi, Olli
Kinnunen, Tuure
Varjosalo, Markku
Niskanen, Einari A.
Paakinaho, Ville
Palvimo, Jorma J.
2025
Oncogene
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202505085050
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202505085050
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Glucocorticoids are a mainstay in the treatment of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). The glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a ligand-activated transcription factor (TF), mediates their actions. Chromatin occupancy, chromatin-protein networks (chromatomes) and gene programmes of GR are regulated by SUMOylation, a post-translational modification with therapeutic implications in other hematomalignancies. To unravel the GR-SUMOylation crosstalk in B-ALL, we induced hypoSUMOylation in NALM6 B-ALL cells with a SUMOylation inhibitor (SUMOi, ML-792). Genome-wide profiling of GR and SUMO chromatin-binding and chromatin accessibility revealed that hypoSUMOylation augmented GR chromatin occupancy and altered chromatin openness. Association with transcriptome data indicated that the hypoSUMOylation-induced GR-binding sites predominantly repressed genes associated with cell cycle and DNA replication. Consistently, hypoSUMOylation potentiated glucocorticoid-induced cell cycle arrest and growth suppression. Moreover, our proteomic analyses revealed that the protein network of chromatin-bound GR is tightly intertwined with SUMO2/3 and that SUMOylation modulates the stability of the network. The chromatome contained several B-cell TFs with cognate binding motifs found on GR-adjacent chromatin sites, indicating their simultaneous occupancy on chromatin. In sum, our data imply potential for targeting SUMOylation to increase sensitivity to glucocorticoids in B-ALL, supported by ex vivo data of glucocorticoid and SUMOi TAK-981 combination-treated B-ALL patient samples.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [20263]