Association of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASp) in epigenetic regulation of B cell differentiation in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

AbstractNon-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounts for approximately 85% of all lung cancer which is the deadliest type of cancer for both men and women. Previous studies already showed that cell-intrinsic loss of WASp causes B cell tolerance and WASp deficiency in T helper (TH) cells is linked to negative effects on cytokine gene transcription necessary for TH1 differentiation. In the current study, we investigated the molecular mechanisms involved in WASp-mediated epigenetic regulation of B cell differentiation during NSCLC. Our ChIP-qPCR data suggest the less percentage enrichment of the B cell differentiating factors (Ikaros, Pax5, PU.1, BATF) and WASp across the WAS gene in the B cells of NSCLC patients in comparison with normal healthy donors and overexpression of WASp showed the reverse effects. WASp-depleted B cells while co-culturing with respective PBMCs isolated from normal healthy donors and NSCLC patients, we observed upregulation of TH2-, TH17-, and Treg-specific cytokines (IL4, ILI7A, IL10)& transcription factors (GATA3, RORC, FOXP3) and downregulation of TH1-specific cytokine (IFN γ)& transcription factor (TBX21). Our study showed that the overexpression of WASp resulted into upregulation of B cell differentiating factors, tumor suppressor protein (p53), histone methylation marker (H3K4me3) with concomitant downregulation of tumor-promoting factors (Notch 1, β-Catenin, DNAPKcs) and histone deacetylation marker (HDAC2) and increase in percentage cyto...
Source: Medical Oncology - Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research