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Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors

BACKGROUND: Insertional mutagenesis screens of retrovirus-induced mouse tumors have proven valuable in human cancer research and for understanding adverse effects of retroviral-based gene therapies. In previous studies, the assignment of mouse genes to individual retroviral integration sites has bee...

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Autores principales: Sokol, Martin, Wabl, Matthias, Ruiz, Irene Rius, Pedersen, Finn Skou
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4098794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24886479
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-11-36
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author Sokol, Martin
Wabl, Matthias
Ruiz, Irene Rius
Pedersen, Finn Skou
author_facet Sokol, Martin
Wabl, Matthias
Ruiz, Irene Rius
Pedersen, Finn Skou
author_sort Sokol, Martin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Insertional mutagenesis screens of retrovirus-induced mouse tumors have proven valuable in human cancer research and for understanding adverse effects of retroviral-based gene therapies. In previous studies, the assignment of mouse genes to individual retroviral integration sites has been based on close proximity and expression patterns of annotated genes at target positions in the genome. We here employed next-generation RNA sequencing to map retroviral-mouse chimeric junctions genome-wide, and to identify local patterns of transcription activation in T-lymphomas induced by the murine leukemia gamma-retrovirus SL3-3. Moreover, to determine epigenetic integration preferences underlying long-range gene activation by retroviruses, the colocalization propensity with common epigenetic enhancer markers (H3K4Me1 and H3K27Ac) of 6,117 integrations derived from end-stage tumors of more than 2,000 mice was examined. RESULTS: We detected several novel mechanisms of retroviral insertional mutagenesis: bidirectional activation of mouse transcripts on opposite sides of a provirus including transcription of unannotated mouse sequence; sense/antisense-type activation of genes located on opposite DNA strands; tandem-type activation of distal genes that are positioned adjacently on the same DNA strand; activation of genes that are not the direct integration targets; combination-type insertional mutagenesis, in which enhancer activation, alternative chimeric splicing and retroviral promoter insertion are induced by a single retrovirus. We also show that irrespective of the distance to transcription start sites, the far majority of retroviruses in end-stage tumors colocalize with H3K4Me1 and H3K27Ac-enriched regions in murine lymphoid tissues. CONCLUSIONS: We expose novel retrovirus-induced host transcription activation patterns that reach beyond a single and nearest annotated gene target. Awareness of this previously undescribed layer of complexity may prove important for elucidation of adverse effects in retroviral-based gene therapies. We also show that wild-type gamma-retroviruses are frequently positioned at enhancers, suggesting that integration into regulatory regions is specific and also subject to positive selection for sustaining long-range gene activation in end-stage tumors. Altogether, this study should prove useful for extrapolating adverse outcomes of retroviral vector therapies, and for understanding fundamental cellular regulatory principles and retroviral biology.
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spelling pubmed-40987942014-07-16 Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors Sokol, Martin Wabl, Matthias Ruiz, Irene Rius Pedersen, Finn Skou Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: Insertional mutagenesis screens of retrovirus-induced mouse tumors have proven valuable in human cancer research and for understanding adverse effects of retroviral-based gene therapies. In previous studies, the assignment of mouse genes to individual retroviral integration sites has been based on close proximity and expression patterns of annotated genes at target positions in the genome. We here employed next-generation RNA sequencing to map retroviral-mouse chimeric junctions genome-wide, and to identify local patterns of transcription activation in T-lymphomas induced by the murine leukemia gamma-retrovirus SL3-3. Moreover, to determine epigenetic integration preferences underlying long-range gene activation by retroviruses, the colocalization propensity with common epigenetic enhancer markers (H3K4Me1 and H3K27Ac) of 6,117 integrations derived from end-stage tumors of more than 2,000 mice was examined. RESULTS: We detected several novel mechanisms of retroviral insertional mutagenesis: bidirectional activation of mouse transcripts on opposite sides of a provirus including transcription of unannotated mouse sequence; sense/antisense-type activation of genes located on opposite DNA strands; tandem-type activation of distal genes that are positioned adjacently on the same DNA strand; activation of genes that are not the direct integration targets; combination-type insertional mutagenesis, in which enhancer activation, alternative chimeric splicing and retroviral promoter insertion are induced by a single retrovirus. We also show that irrespective of the distance to transcription start sites, the far majority of retroviruses in end-stage tumors colocalize with H3K4Me1 and H3K27Ac-enriched regions in murine lymphoid tissues. CONCLUSIONS: We expose novel retrovirus-induced host transcription activation patterns that reach beyond a single and nearest annotated gene target. Awareness of this previously undescribed layer of complexity may prove important for elucidation of adverse effects in retroviral-based gene therapies. We also show that wild-type gamma-retroviruses are frequently positioned at enhancers, suggesting that integration into regulatory regions is specific and also subject to positive selection for sustaining long-range gene activation in end-stage tumors. Altogether, this study should prove useful for extrapolating adverse outcomes of retroviral vector therapies, and for understanding fundamental cellular regulatory principles and retroviral biology. BioMed Central 2014-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4098794/ /pubmed/24886479 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-11-36 Text en Copyright © 2014 Sokol et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Sokol, Martin
Wabl, Matthias
Ruiz, Irene Rius
Pedersen, Finn Skou
Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
title Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
title_full Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
title_fullStr Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
title_full_unstemmed Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
title_short Novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
title_sort novel principles of gamma-retroviral insertional transcription activation in murine leukemia virus-induced end-stage tumors
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4098794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24886479
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-11-36
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