Chromatin Organization Governs Transcriptional Response and Plasticity of Cancer Stem Cells

Yinu Wang & Daniela Matei et al. · 2025-03-07

Abstract

Chromatin organization regulates transcription to influence cellular plasticity and cell fate. We explored whether chromatin nanoscale packing domains are involved in stemness and response to chemotherapy. Using an optical spectroscopic nanosensing technology we show that ovarian cancer‐derived cancer stem cells (CSCs) display upregulation of nanoscale chromatin packing domains compared to non‐CSCs. Cleavage under targets and tagmentation (CUT&Tag) sequencing with antibodies for repressive H3K27me3 and active H3K4me3 and H3K27ac marks mapped chromatin regions associated with differentially expressed genes. More poised genes marked by both H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 were identified in CSCs vs. non‐CSCs, supporting increased transcriptional plasticity of CSCs. Pathways related to Wnt signaling and cytokine‐cytokine receptor interaction were repressed in non‐CSCs, while retinol metabolism and antioxidant response were activated in CSCs. Comparative transcriptomic analyses showed higher intercellular transcriptional heterogeneity at baseline in CSCs. In response to cisplatin, genes with low baseline expression levels underwent the highest upregulation in CSCs, demonstrating transcriptional plasticity under stress. Epigenome targeting drugs downregulated chromatin packing domains and promoted cellular differentiation. A disruptor of telomeric silencing 1‐like (Dot1L) inhibitor blocked transcriptional plasticity, reversing stemness. These findings support that CSCs harbor upregulated chromatin packing domains, contributing to transcriptional and cell plasticity that epigenome modifiers can target.

Funding
Ovarian Cancer Research Alliance FundingNorthwestern University Allergy and Immunology Research (NUAIR) ProgramNorthwestern University - Flow Cytometry Core Facility Grant NCI CA060553National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program Grant DGE-1842165Cancer Research Training and EducationCoordinationPhysical Genomics and Engineering Training ProgramNorthwestern University Center for Chromatin NanoImaging in Cancer (NU-CCNIC)NIH HHS FundingPhysical Genomics and Engineering Training ProgramReducing Cancer Transcriptional Heterogeneity through Regulation of Chromatin StructureU.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Grant BX000792-09A2NUSeq Core Grant NCI CCSG P30 CA060553New Epigenetic Targets in Ovarian Cancer Stem CellsReducing Cancer Transcriptional Heterogeneity through Regulation of Chromatin StructureBioinformatics Analysis of Next Generation Sequencing Data from Cancer CellsCharacterizing functional translation in putative 'noncoding' regions of a genomeNorthwestern University Center for Chromatin NanoImaging in Cancer (NU-CCNIC)Christina Carinato Charitable Foundation FundingChemo-mediated transcriptional reprogramming in ovarian cancerNational Science Foundation Grant EFMA-1830961Northwestern University Allergy and Immunology Research (NUAIR) ProgramRobert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center FundingNational Institutes of Health FundingPhysical Genomics and Engineering Training ProgramReducing Cancer Transcriptional Heterogeneity through Regulation of Chromatin StructureNorthwestern University Allergy and Immunology Research (NUAIR) ProgramNational Science Foundation Grant EFMA‐1830961National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program Grant DGE‐1842165U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Grant BX000792‐09A2National Cancer Center Grant U54CA268084‐02

NCI NIH HHS

T32AI083216

NCI NIH HHS

T32GM142604

NCI NIH HHS

U54 CA268084

NIGMS NIH HHS

T32 GM142604

NCI NIH HHS

R01 CA228272

BLRD VA

I01 BX000792

NCI NIH HHS

R01CA228272

NCI NIH HHS

R50 CA221848

NIGMS NIH HHS

R35 GM138192

National Cancer Center

U54CA268084-02

NCI NIH HHS

R01 CA267544

NIAID NIH HHS

T32 AI083216

National Cancer Institute

T32GM142604

National Cancer Institute

R01CA228272

National Cancer Institute

T32AI083216