Frequent ZNF217 mutations lead to transcriptional deregulation of interferon signal
transduction via altered chromatin accessibility in B cell lymphoma.
(NKFIH K21-137948) Támogató: Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation
Office
Recent exome-wide studies discovered frequent somatic mutations in the epigenetic
modifier ZNF217 in primary mediastinal B cell lymphoma (PMBCL) and related disorders.
As functional consequences of ZNF217 alterations remain unknown, we comprehensively
evaluated their impact in PMBCL. Targeted sequencing identified genetic lesions affecting
ZNF217 in 33% of 157 PMBCL patients. Subsequent gene expression profiling (n = 120)
revealed changes in cytokine and interferon signal transduction in ZNF217-aberrant
PMBCL cases. In vitro, knockout of ZNF217 led to changes in chromatin accessibility
interfering with binding motifs for crucial lymphoma-associated transcription factors.
This led to disturbed expression of interferon-responsive and inflammation-associated
genes, altered cell behavior, and aberrant differentiation. Mass spectrometry demonstrates
that ZNF217 acts within a histone modifier complex containing LSD1, CoREST and HDAC
and interferes with H3K4 methylation and H3K27 acetylation. Concluding, our data suggest
non-catalytic activity of ZNF217, which directs histone modifier complex function
and controls B cell differentiation-associated patterns of chromatin structure.