Endometrial tumorigenesis involves epigenetic plasticity demarcating non-coding somatic mutations and 3D-genome alterations
- PMID: 40346709
- PMCID: PMC12063248
- DOI: 10.1186/s13059-025-03596-5
Endometrial tumorigenesis involves epigenetic plasticity demarcating non-coding somatic mutations and 3D-genome alterations
Abstract
Background: The incidence and mortality of endometrial cancer (EC) is on the rise. Eighty-five percent of ECs depend on estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) for proliferation, but little is known about its transcriptional regulation in these tumors.
Results: We generate epigenomics, transcriptomics, and Hi-C datastreams in healthy and tumor endometrial tissues, identifying robust ERα reprogramming and profound alterations in 3D genome organization that lead to a gain of tumor-specific enhancer activity during EC development. Integration with endometrial cancer risk single-nucleotide polymorphisms and whole-genome sequencing data from primary tumors and metastatic samples reveals a striking enrichment of risk variants and non-coding somatic mutations at tumor-enriched ERα sites. Through machine learning-based predictions and interaction proteomics analyses, we identify an enhancer mutation which alters 3D genome conformation, impairing recruitment of the transcriptional repressor EHMT2/G9a/KMT1C, thereby alleviating transcriptional repression of ESR1 in EC.
Conclusions: In summary, we identify a complex genomic-epigenomic interplay in EC development and progression, altering 3D genome organization to enhance expression of the critical driver ERα.
Keywords: 3D genome organization; Endometrial cancer; Epigenetic plasticity in tumor development; Estrogen receptor; Gene regulation; Non-coding somatic mutations.
© 2025. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: This study was approved by the local medical ethics committee of the Netherlands Cancer Institute (Institutional Review Board (IRB) reference number: IRBdm19-277) and complies with the ethical principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. All patients provided informed consent for translational studies. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.
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