作者
Gulfem D. Guler,Charles Tindell,Robert M. Pitti,Catherine Wilson,Katrina Nichols,Tommy K. Cheung,Hyojin Kim,Matthew J. Wongchenko,Yibing Yan,Benjamin Haley,Trinna Cuellar,Joshua D. Webster,Navneet Alag,Ganapati V. Hegde,Erica Jackson,Tracy Nance,Paul G. Giresi,Kuan-Bei Chen,Jinfeng Liu,Suchit Jhunjhunwala,Jeff Settleman,Jean-Philippe Stéphan,David Arnott,Marie Classon
摘要
Maintenance of phenotypic heterogeneity within cell populations is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism that underlies population survival upon stressful exposures. We show that the genomes of a cancer cell subpopulation that survives treatment with otherwise lethal drugs, the drug-tolerant persisters (DTPs), exhibit a repressed chromatin state characterized by increased methylation of histone H3 lysines 9 and 27 (H3K9 and H3K27). We also show that survival of DTPs is, in part, maintained by regulators of H3K9me3-mediated heterochromatin formation and that the observed increase in H3K9me3 in DTPs is most prominent over long interspersed repeat element 1 (LINE-1). Disruption of the repressive chromatin over LINE-1 elements in DTPs results in DTP ablation, which is partially rescued by reducing LINE-1 expression or function.