- Jiang, Yanwen;
- Ortega-Molina, Ana;
- Geng, Huimin;
- Ying, Hsia-Yuan;
- Hatzi, Katerina;
- Parsa, Sara;
- McNally, Dylan;
- Wang, Ling;
- Doane, Ashley S;
- Agirre, Xabier;
- Teater, Matt;
- Meydan, Cem;
- Li, Zhuoning;
- Poloway, David;
- Wang, Shenqiu;
- Ennishi, Daisuke;
- Scott, David W;
- Stengel, Kristy R;
- Kranz, Janice E;
- Holson, Edward;
- Sharma, Sneh;
- Young, James W;
- Chu, Chi-Shuen;
- Roeder, Robert G;
- Shaknovich, Rita;
- Hiebert, Scott W;
- Gascoyne, Randy D;
- Tam, Wayne;
- Elemento, Olivier;
- Wendel, Hans-Guido;
- Melnick, Ari M
Somatic mutations in CREBBP occur frequently in B-cell lymphoma. Here, we show that loss of CREBBP facilitates the development of germinal center (GC)-derived lymphomas in mice. In both human and murine lymphomas, CREBBP loss-of-function resulted in focal depletion of enhancer H3K27 acetylation and aberrant transcriptional silencing of genes that regulate B-cell signaling and immune responses, including class II MHC. Mechanistically, CREBBP-regulated enhancers are counter-regulated by the BCL6 transcriptional repressor in a complex with SMRT and HDAC3, which we found to bind extensively to MHC class II loci. HDAC3 loss-of-function rescued repression of these enhancers and corresponding genes, including MHC class II, and more profoundly suppressed CREBBP-mutant lymphomas in vitro and in vivo Hence, CREBBP loss-of-function contributes to lymphomagenesis by enabling unopposed suppression of enhancers by BCL6/SMRT/HDAC3 complexes, suggesting HDAC3-targeted therapy as a precision approach for CREBBP-mutant lymphomas.
Significance
Our findings establish the tumor suppressor function of CREBBP in GC lymphomas in which CREBBP mutations disable acetylation and result in unopposed deacetylation by BCL6/SMRT/HDAC3 complexes at enhancers of B-cell signaling and immune response genes. Hence, inhibition of HDAC3 can restore the enhancer histone acetylation and may serve as a targeted therapy for CREBBP-mutant lymphomas. Cancer Discov; 7(1); 38-53. ©2016 AACR.See related commentary by Höpken, p. 14This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1.