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Continent-wide tree fecundity driven by indirect climate effects 期刊论文
Nature Communications, 2021
作者:  James S. Clark;  Robert Andrus;  Melaine Aubry-Kientz;  Yves Bergeron;  Michal Bogdziewicz;  Don C. Bragg;  Dale Brockway;  Natalie L. Cleavitt;  Susan Cohen;  Benoit Courbaud;  Robert Daley;  Adrian J. Das;  Michael Dietze;  Timothy J. Fahey;  Istem Fer;  Jerry F. Franklin;  Catherine A. Gehring;  Gregory S. Gilbert;  Cathryn H. Greenberg;  Qinfeng Guo;  Janneke HilleRisLambers;  Ines Ibanez;  Jill Johnstone;  Christopher L. Kilner;  Johannes Knops;  Walter D. Koenig;  Georges Kunstler;  Jalene M. LaMontagne;  Kristin L. Legg;  Jordan Luongo;  James A. Lutz;  Diana Macias;  Eliot J. B. McIntire;  Yassine Messaoud;  Christopher M. Moore;  Emily Moran;  Jonathan A. Myers;  Orrin B. Myers;  Chase Nunez;  Robert Parmenter;  Sam Pearse;  Scott Pearson;  Renata Poulton-Kamakura;  Ethan Ready;  Miranda D. Redmond;  Chantal D. Reid;  Kyle C. Rodman;  C. Lane Scher;  William H. Schlesinger;  Amanda M. Schwantes;  Erin Shanahan;  Shubhi Sharma;  Michael A. Steele;  Nathan L. Stephenson;  Samantha Sutton;  Jennifer J. Swenson;  Margaret Swift;  Thomas T. Veblen;  Amy V. Whipple;  Thomas G. Whitham;  Andreas P. Wion;  Kai Zhu;  Roman Zlotin
收藏  |  浏览/下载:14/0  |  提交时间:2021/03/02
Impaired cell fate through gain-of-function mutations in a chromatin reader 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7788) : 121-+
作者:  Wan, Liling;  Chong, Shasha;  Xuan, Fan;  Liang, Angela;  Cui, Xiaodong;  Gates, Leah;  Carroll, Thomas S.;  Li, Yuanyuan;  Feng, Lijuan;  Chen, Guochao;  Wang, Shu-Ping;  Ortiz, Michael V.;  Daley, Sara K.;  Wang, Xiaolu;  Xuan, Hongwen;  Kentsis, Alex;  Muir, Tom W.;  Roeder, Robert G.;  Li, Haitao;  Li, Wei;  Tjian, Robert;  Wen, Hong;  Allis, C. David
收藏  |  浏览/下载:10/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Modifications of histone proteins have essential roles in normal development and human disease. Recognition of modified histones by '  reader'  proteins is a key mechanism that mediates the function of histone modifications, but how the dysregulation of these readers might contribute to disease remains poorly understood. We previously identified the ENL protein as a reader of histone acetylation via its YEATS domain, linking it to the expression of cancer-driving genes in acute leukaemia1. Recurrent hotspot mutations have been found in the ENL YEATS domain in Wilms tumour2,3, the most common type of paediatric kidney cancer. Here we show, using human and mouse cells, that these mutations impair cell-fate regulation by conferring gain-of-function in chromatin recruitment and transcriptional control. ENL mutants induce gene-expression changes that favour a premalignant cell fate, and, in an assay for nephrogenesis using murine cells, result in undifferentiated structures resembling those observed in human Wilms tumour. Mechanistically, although bound to largely similar genomic loci as the wild-type protein, ENL mutants exhibit increased occupancy at a subset of targets, leading to a marked increase in the recruitment and activity of transcription elongation machinery that enforces active transcription from target loci. Furthermore, ectopically expressed ENL mutants exhibit greater self-association and form discrete and dynamic nuclear puncta that are characteristic of biomolecular hubs consisting of local high concentrations of regulatory factors. Such mutation-driven ENL self-association is functionally linked to enhanced chromatin occupancy and gene activation. Collectively, our findings show that hotspot mutations in a chromatinreader domain drive self-reinforced recruitment, derailing normal cell-fate control during development and leading to an oncogenic outcome.


  
Patterns of somatic structural variation in human cancer genomes 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7793) : 112-+
作者:  Wan, Liling;  Chong, Shasha;  Xuan, Fan;  Liang, Angela;  Cui, Xiaodong;  Gates, Leah;  Carroll, Thomas S.;  Li, Yuanyuan;  Feng, Lijuan;  Chen, Guochao;  Wang, Shu-Ping;  Ortiz, Michael V.;  Daley, Sara K.;  Wang, Xiaolu;  Xuan, Hongwen;  Kentsis, Alex;  Muir, Tom W.;  Roeder, Robert G.;  Li, Haitao;  Li, Wei;  Tjian, Robert;  Wen, Hong;  Allis, C. David
收藏  |  浏览/下载:36/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

A key mutational process in cancer is structural variation, in which rearrangements delete, amplify or reorder genomic segments that range in size from kilobases to whole chromosomes(1-7). Here we develop methods to group, classify and describe somatic structural variants, using data from the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium of the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), which aggregated whole-genome sequencing data from 2,658 cancers across 38 tumour types(8). Sixteen signatures of structural variation emerged. Deletions have a multimodal size distribution, assort unevenly across tumour types and patients, are enriched in late-replicating regions and correlate with inversions. Tandem duplications also have a multimodal size distribution, but are enriched in early-replicating regions-as are unbalanced translocations. Replication-based mechanisms of rearrangement generate varied chromosomal structures with low-level copy-number gains and frequent inverted rearrangements. One prominent structure consists of 2-7 templates copied from distinct regions of the genome strung together within one locus. Such cycles of templated insertions correlate with tandem duplications, and-in liver cancerfrequently activate the telomerase gene TERT. A wide variety of rearrangement processes are active in cancer, which generate complex configurations of the genome upon which selection can act.