Large-scale discovery of chromatin dysregulation induced by oncofusions and other protein-coding variants.
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Abstract | Population-scale databases have expanded to millions of protein-coding variants, yet insight into their mechanistic consequences has lagged. Here we present PROD-ATAC, a high-throughput method for discovering the effects of protein-coding variants on chromatin regulation. A pooled variant library is expressed in a disease-agnostic cell line, and single-cell assay for transposase-accessible chromatin resolves each variant's effect on the chromatin landscape. Using PROD-ATAC, we characterized the effects of more than 100 oncofusions (cancer-causing chimeric proteins) and controls and revealed that chromatin remodeling is common to fusions spanning an enormous range of fusion frequencies. Furthermore, fusion-induced dysregulation can be context agnostic, as observed mechanisms often overlapped with cancer and cell-type-specific prior knowledge. We also showed that gain-of-function activity is common among oncofusions. This work begins to outline a global map of fusion-induced chromatin alterations. We suggest that there might be convergent mechanisms among disparate oncofusions and shared modes of dysregulation among fusions present in tumors at different frequencies. PROD-ATAC is generalizable to any set of protein-coding variants. |
Year of Publication | 2024
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Journal | Nature biotechnology
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Date Published | 07/2024
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ISSN | 1546-1696
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DOI | 10.1038/s41587-024-02347-4
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PubMed ID | 39048711
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