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DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2021.05.007
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

STAG2 loss rewires oncogenic and developmental programs to promote metastasis in Ewing sarcoma

Biniam Adane,Gabriela Alexe,Bo Kyung A. Seong,Diana Lu,Elizabeth E. Hwang,Denes Hnisz,Caleb A. Lareau,Linda S. Ross,Shuo Lin,Filemon S. Dela Cruz,Melissa Richardson,Abraham S. Weintraub,Sarah Wang,Amanda Balboni Iniguez,Neekesh V. Dharia,Amy Saur Conway,Amanda L. Robichaud,Benjamin Tanenbaum,John M. Krill-Burger,Francisca Vázquez,Monica Schenone,Jason N. Berman,Andrew L. Kung,Steven A. Carr,Martin J. Aryee,Richard A. Young,Brian D. Crompton,Kimberly Stegmaier

Cohesin
Enhancer
Chromatin
2021
The core cohesin subunit STAG2 is recurrently mutated in Ewing sarcoma but its biological role is less clear. Here, we demonstrate that cohesin complexes containing STAG2 occupy enhancer and polycomb repressive complex (PRC2)-marked regulatory regions. Genetic suppression of STAG2 leads to a compensatory increase in cohesin-STAG1 complexes, but not in enhancer-rich regions, and results in reprogramming of cis-chromatin interactions. Strikingly, in STAG2 knockout cells the oncogenic genetic program driven by the fusion transcription factor EWS/FLI1 was highly perturbed, in part due to altered enhancer-promoter contacts. Moreover, loss of STAG2 also disrupted PRC2-mediated regulation of gene expression. Combined, these transcriptional changes converged to modulate EWS/FLI1, migratory, and neurodevelopmental programs. Finally, consistent with clinical observations, functional studies revealed that loss of STAG2 enhances the metastatic potential of Ewing sarcoma xenografts. Our findings demonstrate that STAG2 mutations can alter chromatin architecture and transcriptional programs to promote an aggressive cancer phenotype.
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    STAG2 loss rewires oncogenic and developmental programs to promote metastasis in Ewing sarcoma” is a paper by Biniam Adane Gabriela Alexe Bo Kyung A. Seong Diana Lu Elizabeth E. Hwang Denes Hnisz Caleb A. Lareau Linda S. Ross Shuo Lin Filemon S. Dela Cruz Melissa Richardson Abraham S. Weintraub Sarah Wang Amanda Balboni Iniguez Neekesh V. Dharia Amy Saur Conway Amanda L. Robichaud Benjamin Tanenbaum John M. Krill-Burger Francisca Vázquez Monica Schenone Jason N. Berman Andrew L. Kung Steven A. Carr Martin J. Aryee Richard A. Young Brian D. Crompton Kimberly Stegmaier published in 2021. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.