The interaction of ENL with PAF1 mitigates polycomb silencing and facilitates murine leukemogenesis

Eleven-nineteen leukemia (ENL) is a chromatin reader present in complexes stimulating transcriptional elongation. It is fused to mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) in leukemia, and missense mutations have been identified in Wilms tumor and acute myeloid leukemia. Here we demonstrate that ENL overcomes polycomb silencing through recruitment of PAF1 via the conserved YEATS domain, which recognizes acetylated histone H3. PAF1 was responsible for antirepressive activities of ENL in vitro, and it determined the transforming potential of MLL-ENL. MLL-ENL target loci showed supraphysiological PAF1 binding, hyperubiquitination of histone H2B and hypomodification with H2AUb, resulting in accelerated transcription rates. YEATS mutations induced a gain of function, transforming primary hematopoietic cells in vitro and in transplantation assays through aberrant transcription and H2B ubiquitination of Hoxa9 and Meis1. Mechanistically, H3 and PAF1 competed for ENL interaction, with activating mutations favoring PAF1 binding, whereas the MLL moiety provided a constitutive PAF1 tether allowing MLL fusions to circumvent H3 competition.
Source: Blood - Category: Hematology Authors: Tags: Myeloid Neoplasia Source Type: research